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Mining Terms
Active workings Any
place in a mine where miners are
normally required to work or travel,
which are ventilated and inspected
regularly.
Advance Mining in the
same direction, or order of sequence.
Airway Any passage
through which air is carried; also known
as an air course.
Aquifer A
water-bearing bed of porous rock, often
sandstone.
Auger A rotary drill
that uses a screw device to penetrate,
break, and then transport the drilled
material (coal).
Auger Mining A form
of underground mining that uses an
auger, which looks like a large
carpenters wood drill. The auger bores
into a coal seam and discharges coal out
of the spiral onto a waiting conveyor
belt. When mining is finished, the
openings are back-filled. This method is
usually employed to recover any
additional coal left in deep overburden
areas that cannot be reached
economically by further contour or area
mining.
Back The roof or
upper part in any underground mining
cavity.
Backfill Rock and
other material used for refilling after
excavation.
Barricading Enclosing
part of a mine to prevent inflow of
noxious gasses from a mine fire or an
explosion.
Barrier Barrier
pillars are solid blocks of coal left
between two mines or sections of a mine
to prevent accidents due to inrushes of
water, gas, or from explosions or a mine
fire.
Beam A bar or
straight girder used to support a span
of roof between two support props or
walls.
Bed A stratum of coal
or other sedimentary deposit.
Belt conveyor A
looped belt on which coal or other
materials can be carried and which is
generally constructed of flame-resistant
material or of reinforced rubber or
rubber-like substance.
Belt idler A roller,
usually of cylindrical shape, which is
supported on a frame and which, in turn,
supports or guides a conveyor belt.
Idlers are not powered but turn by
contact with the moving belt.
Belt takeup A belt
pulley, generally under a conveyor belt
and inby the drive pulley, kept under
strong tension parallel to the belt
line. Its purpose is to automatically
compensate for any slack in the belting
created by start-up, etc.
Bench Layers of a
coal seam separated by slate or formed
by the process of cutting the coal.
Beneficiation The
treatment of mined material, making it
more concentrated or richer.
Bit The hardened and
strengthened device at the end of a
drill rod that transmits the energy of
breakage to the rock. The size of the
bit determines the size of the hole.
Bituminous coal A
middle rank coal (between subbituminous
and anthracite) formed by additional
pressure and heat on lignite. Usually
has a high Btu value and may be referred
to as soft coal.
Black damp A term
generally applied to carbon dioxide. It
is a mixture of carbon dioxide and
nitrogen. It is also applied to an
atmosphere depleted of oxygen, rather
than having an excess of carbon dioxide.
Blasting agent Any
material consisting of a mixture of a
fuel and an oxidizer.
Blasting cap A
detonator containing a charge of
detonating compound, which is ignited by
electric current or the spark of a fuse.
Used for detonating explosives.
Blasting circuit
Electric circuits used to fire electric
detonators or to ignite an igniter cord
by means of an electric starter.
Bleeder or bleeder entries
Special air courses developed and
maintained as part of the mine
ventilation system and designed to
continuously move air-methane mixtures
emitted by the gob or at the active face
away from the active workings and into
mine-return air courses.
Borehole Any deep or
long drill-hole, usually associated with
a diamond drill.
Bottom Floor or
underlying surface of an underground
excavation.
Break line The line
that roughly follows the rear edges of
coal pillars that are being mined; the
line in which the roof of a coal mine is
expected to break.
Btu British thermal
unit. A measure of the energy required
to raise the temperature of one pound of
water one degree Fahrenheit.
Cage In a mine shaft,
the device, similar to an elevator car,
that is used for hoisting personnel and
materials.
Clean Coal Technologies
A number of innovative, new
technologies designed to use coal in a
more efficient and cost-effective manner
while enhancing environmental
protection. Several promising
technologies include: fluidized-bed
combustion, integrated gasification
combined cycle, limestone injection
multi-stage burner, enhanced flue gas
desulfurization (or scrubbing), coal
liquefaction and coal gasification.
Coal A solid,
brittle, more or less distinctly
stratified combustible carbonaceous
rock, formed by partial to complete
decomposition of vegetation; varies in
color from dark brown to black; not
fusible without decomposition and very
insoluble.
Coal dust Particles
of coal that can pass a No. 20 sieve.
Coal Gasification The
conversion of coal into a gaseous fuel.
Coal mine An area of
land and all structures, facilities,
machinery, tools, equipment, shafts,
slopes, tunnels, excavations, and other
property, real or personal, placed upon,
under, or above the surface of such land
by any person, used in extracting coal
from its natural deposits in the earth
by any means or method, and the work of
preparing the coal so extracted,
including coal preparation facilities.
Coal miner One who is
engaged in the extraction of coal. In
2005, 81,000 coal miners in the United
States produced about 6.3 tons of coal
per hour each.
Coal reserves
Measured tonnages of coal that have been
calculated to occur in a coal seam
within a particular property.
Coal resources Total
coal deposits, regardless of whether
they can be mined or recovered. The
United States is estimated to have 4
trillion tons of coal resources by the
U.S. Geological Survey.
Coal washing The
process of separating undesirable
materials from coal based on differences
in densities.
Coke A hard, dry
carbon substance produced by heating
coal to a very high temperature in the
absence of air.
Continuous miner A
machine that constantly extracts coal
while it loads. This is to be
distinguished from a conventional or
cyclic unit, which must stop the
extraction process in order for loading
to commence.
Contour An imaginary
line that connects all points on a
surface having the same elevation.
Conventional mining
The first fullymechanized underground
mining method involving the insertion of
explosives in a coal seam, blasting the
seam, and removing the coal onto a
conveyor or shuttle car by a loading
machine.
Conveyor An apparatus
for moving material from one point to
another in a continuous fashion. This is
accomplished with an endless (that is,
looped) procession of hooks, buckets,
wide rubber belt, etc.
Core sample A
cylinder sample generally 1-5 in
diameter drilled out of an area to
determine the geologic and chemical
analysis of the overburden and coal.
Crusher A machine for
crushing rock or other materials. Among
the various types of crushers are the
ball mill, gyratory crusher, Handsel
mill, hammer mill, jaw crusher, rod
mill, rolls, stamp mill, and tube mill.
Deposit Mineral
deposit or ore deposit is used to
designate a natural occurrence of a
useful mineral, or an ore, in sufficient
extent and degree of concentration to
invite exploitation.
Depth The word alone
generally denotes vertical depth below
the surface. In the case of incline
shafts and boreholes it may mean the
distance reached from the beginning of
the shaft or hole, the borehole depth,
or the inclined depth.
Dragline A large
excavation machine used in surface
mining to remove overburden (layers of
rock and soil) covering a coal seam. The
dragline casts a wire rope-hung bucket a
considerable distance, collects the dug
material by pulling the bucket toward
itself on the ground with a second wire
rope (or chain), elevates the bucket,
and moves the material to another
location.
Drainage The process
of removing surplus ground or surface
water either by artificial means or by
gravity flow.
Drift mine A coal
mine entered directly through a
horizontal opening drilled into the side
of a hill or mountain.
Drill A machine
utilizing rotation, percussion
(hammering), or a combination of both to
make holes. If the hole is much over
0.4m in diameter, the machine is called
a borer.
Dump To unload; a
load of coal or waste; the mechanism for
unloading, e.g. a car dump (sometimes
called tipple); or, the pile created by
such unloading, e.g. a waste dump (also
called heap, pile, tip, spoil pike,
etc.).
Entry An underground
horizontal or near-horizontal passage
used for haulage, ventilation, or as a
mainway; a coal heading; a working place
where the coal is extracted from the
seam in initial mining.
Extraction The
process of mining coal.
Face The exposed area
of a coal bed from which coal is being
extracted.
Face cleat The
principal cleavage plane or joint at
right angles to the stratification of
the coal seam.
Fan, auxiliary A
small, portable fan used to supplement
the ventilation of an individual working
place.
Feeder A machine that
feeds coal onto a conveyor belt evenly.
Fill Any material
that is put back in place of the
extracted coal to provide ground
support.
Fire damp The
combustible gas, methane, CH4. Also, the
explosive methane-air mixtures with
between 5% and 15% methane. A
combustible gas formed in mines by
decomposition of coal or other
carbonaceous matter, and that consists
chiefly of methane.
Floor That part of
any underground working upon which a
person walks or upon which haulage
equipment travels; simply the bottom or
underlying surface of an underground
excavation.
Fluidized-bed combustion
A clean coal technology process with a
high ability to remove sulfur from coal
combustion. The process involves
suspending crushed coal and limestone in
the bottom of a boiler by an upward
stream of hot air. While the coal is
burned in this liquid-like mixture,
sulfur combines with the limestone to
form a solid compound that is recovered
with ash.
Fly ash The finely
divided particles of ash suspended in
gases resulting from the combustion of
fuel.
Fossil fuel A
naturally occurring fuel of an organic
nature, such as coal, crude oil and
natural gas.
Gasification Various
processes by which coal is turned into
low, medium, or high Btu gases.
Gob or goaf The term
applied to that part of the mine from
which the coal has been removed and the
space more or less fills up with waste.
Also, the loose waste in a mine.
Haulage The
horizontal transport of ore, coal,
supplies, and waste. The vertical
transport of the same is called
hoisting.
Haulageway Any
underground entry or passageway that is
designed for transport of mined
material, personnel, or equipment,
usually by the installation of track or
belt conveyor.
Highwall The
unexcavated face of exposed overburden
and coal in a surface mine or in a face
or bank on the uphill side of a contour
mine excavation.
Highwall miner A
highwall mining system consists of a
remotely controlled continuous miner
which extracts coal and conveys it via
augers, belt or chain conveyors to the
outside. The cut is typically a
rectangular, horizontal cut from a
highwall bench, reaching depths of
several hundred feet or deeper.
Hoist A drum on which
hoisting rope is wound in the engine
house, as the cage or skip is raised in
the hoisting shaft.
Hoisting The vertical
transport coal or material.
Hopper Car Open
freight cars with a floor sloping to one
or more hinged doors for discharging
bulk materials such as coal. A car for
coal, gravel, etc., shaped like a hopper
with an opening to discharge contents.
Inby Toward or in the
direction of the working face and away
from the mine entrance. Opposite of
outby.
Intake The passage
through which fresh air is drawn or
forced into a mine or to a section of a
mine.
Intermediate section
A term used in belt and chain conveyor
network to designate a section of the
conveyor frame occupying a position
between the head and foot sections.
Immediate roof The
roof strata immediately above the coal
bed, requiring support during the
excavation of coal.
Lamp The electric cap
lamp worn for visibility. Also, the
flame safety lamp used in coal mines to
detect methane gas concentrations and
oxygen deficiency.
Layout The design or
pattern of the main roadways and
workings.
Lift The amount of
coal obtained from a continuous miner in
one mining cycle.
Liquefaction The
process of converting coal into a
synthetic fuel, similar in nature to
crude oil and/or refined products, such
as gasoline.
Longwall Miner A deep
mining machine that uses a steel plow or
rotating drum, which is pulled
mechanically back-and-forth across a
long face of coal.
Longwall Mining One
of three major underground coal mining
methods currently in use. Employs a
steal plow, or rotation drum, which is
pulled mechanically back and forth
across a face of coal. The working area
is protected by a movable, powered roof
support system. The loosened coal falls
onto a conveyor for removal from the
mine.
Main fan A mechanical
ventilator installed at the surface;
operates by either exhausting or blowing
to induce airflow through the mine
roadways and workings.
Manhole A safety hole
constructed in the side of a gangway,
tunnel, or slope in which a miner can be
safe from passing locomotives and cars.
Also called a refuge hole.
Man trip A carrier of
mine personnel, by rail or rubber tire,
to and from the work area. Also called
personnel carrier.
Manway An entry used
exclusively for personnel to travel from
the shaft bottom or drift mouth to the
working section.
Metallurgical coal
Various grades of coal suitable to make
coke for steel manufacture.
Methane A potentially
explosive gas formed naturally from the
decay of vegetative matter, similar to
that which formed coal. Methane, which
is the principal component of natural
gas, is frequently encountered in
underground coal mining operations and
is kept within safe limits through the
use of extensive mine ventilation
systems. In recent years, coalbed
methane has been recognized as an
important energy resource and its
production for that purpose has
increased.
Methane monitor An
electronic instrument often mounted on a
piece of mining equipment that detects
and measures the methane content of mine
air.
Mine development The
term employed to designate the
operations involved in preparing a mine
for coal extraction. These operations
include tunneling, sinking,
cross-cutting, drifting, and raising.
Mountaintop mining
See surface mine.
MSHA Mine Safety and
Health Administration; the federal
agency which regulates coal mine health
and safety.
Natural ventilation
Ventilation of a mine without the aid of
fans or furnaces.
Outby Toward the mine
entrance and farther from the working
face. The opposite of inby.
Permissible That
which is allowable or permitted. It is
most widely applied to mine equipment
and explosives of all kinds which are
similar in all respects to samples that
have passed certain tests of MSHA and
can be used with safety in accordance
with specified conditions where hazards
from explosive gas or coal dust exist.
Permit As it pertains
to mining, a document issued by a
regulatory agency that gives approval
for mining operations to take place.
Pillar An area of
coal left to support the overlying
strata in a mine; sometimes left
permanently to support surface
structures, sometimes systematically
removed to regulate subsidence..
Plan A map showing
features such as mine workings or
geological structures on a horizontal
plane.
Portal The structure
surrounding the immediate entrance to a
mine; the mouth of an adit or tunnel.
Preparation plant A
facility where coal is crushed, sized,
and mechanically cleaned prior to
shipment.
Ranks of coal The
classification of coal by degree of
hardness, moisture and heat content. The
major ranks are lignite, subbituminous,
bituminous and anthracite.
Reclamation The
restoration of land and environmental
values to a surface mine site after the
coal is extracted. Reclamation
operations are usually underway as soon
as the coal is removed from a mine site.
The process includes restoring the land
to its approximate original appearance
by restoring topsoil and planting native
grasses and ground covers.
Recovery The
proportion or percentage of coal mined
from the original seam or deposit.
Reserves Known
identified resources from which usable
coal can be extracted at the time of
determination.
Return The air or
ventilation that has passed through all
the working faces of a split.
Rib The side of a
pillar or the wall of an entry. The
solid coal on the side of any
underground passage.
Roof The rock or
other material above a coal seam; the
overhead surface of a coal working
place. Same as back or top.
Roof bolt A long
steel bolt driven into the roof of
underground excavations to support the
roof, preventing and limiting the extent
of roof falls. The unit consists of the
bolt, steel plate, expansion shell, and
pal nut. The use of roof bolts
eliminates the need for timbering by
fastening together, or laminating,
several weaker layers of roof strata to
build a beam.
Roof bolting A method
of supporting the ceilings of
underground mines by inserting long
steel bolts into holes bored into the
strata forming the roof.
Roof fall A roof
collapse, especially in permanent areas
such as entries.
Roof jack A screw- or
pump-type hydraulic extension post made
of steel and used as temporary roof
support.
Roof sag The sinking,
bending, or curving of the roof,
especially in the middle, from weight or
pressure.
Roof stress
Unbalanced internal forces in the roof
or sides, created when material is
extracted.
Roof support Posts,
jacks, roof bolts and beams used to
support the rock overlying a coal seam
in an underground mine.
Roof trusses A
combination of steel rods anchored into
the roof to create zones of compression
and tension forces and provide better
support for weak roof and roof over wide
areas.
Room and pillar mining
A method of underground mining in coal
is left in place to support the roof of
the active mining area. Large pillars
are left while rooms of coal are
extracted.
Seam A stratum or bed
of coal.
Self-contained breathing
apparatus A self-contained
supply of oxygen used during rescue work
from coal mine fires and explosions;
same as SCSR (self-contained
self-rescuer).
Self-rescuer or SCSR
A small filtering device carried by a
coal miner underground, either on his
belt or in his pocket, to provide him
with immediate protection against carbon
monoxide and smoke in case of a mine
fire or explosion. It is a small
canister with a mouthpiece directly
attached. The wearer breathes through
the mouth, the nose being closed by a
clip. The canister contains a layer of
fused calcium chloride that absorbs
water vapor from the mine air. The
device is used for escape purposes only
because it does not sustain life in
atmospheres containing deficient oxygen.
Shaft A primary
vertical or non-vertical opening through
mine strata used for ventilation or
drainage and/or for hoisting of
personnel or materials; connects the
surface with underground workings.
Shaft mine An
underground mine in which the main entry
or access is by means of a vertical
shaft.
Shortwall A deep
mining method in which small areas are
worked by a continuous miner in
conjunction with longwall-like hydraulic
roof supports.
Shuttle car A
self-discharging truck, generally with
rubber tires or caterpillar-type treads,
used for receiving coal from the loading
or mining machine and transferring it to
an underground loading point, mine
railway or belt conveyor system.
Slope Primary
inclined opening, connecting the surface
with the underground workings.
Slope mine An
underground mine with an opening that
slopes upward or downward to the coal
seam.
Slurry A mixture of
water and any of several finely crushed
solids, especially clay, or coal
Subbituminous Rank of
coal between lignite and bituminous.
Subsidence The
gradual sinking, or sometimes abrupt
collapse, of the rock and soil layers
into an underground mine. Structures and
surface features above the subsidence
area can be affected.
Surface mine A mine
in which the coal lies near the surface
and can be extracted by removing the
covering layers of rock and soil.
Surface mines include: area, contour,
open-pit, strip or auger.
Tipple Originally the
place where the mine cars were tipped
and emptied of their coal, and still
used in that same sense, although now
more generally applied to the surface
structures of a mine, including the
preparation plant and loading tracks.
Ton A short or net
ton is equal to 2,000 pounds; a long or
British ton is 2,240 pounds; a metric
ton is approximately 2,205 pounds.
Tram Used in
connection with moving self-propelled
mining equipment. A tramming motor may
refer to an electric locomotive used for
hauling loaded trips or it may refer to
the motor in a cutting machine that
supplies the power for moving or
tramming the machine.
Transfer point
Location in the materials handling
system, either haulage or hoisting,
where bulk material is transferred
between conveyances.
Underground mine Also
known as a deep mine. Usually located
several hundred feet below the earth's
surface, an underground mine's coal is
removed mechanically and transferred by
shuttle car or conveyor to the surface.
Underground mines are classified
according to the type of opening used to
reach the coal, i.e., drift (level
tunnel), slope (inclined tunnel) or
shaft (vertical tunnel).
Unit train A long
train carrying roughly cars full of
coal.
Ventilation The
provision of a directed flow of fresh
and return air along all underground
roadways, traveling roads, workings, and
service parts.
Violation The
breaking of any state or federal mining
law. The Federal Mine Safety and Health
Act imposes strict liability on mine
operators for violations of safety or
health standards at the mine regardless
of fault.
Void A general term
for pore space or other reopening in the
rock. In addition to pore space, the
term includes vesicles, solution
cavities, or any openings either primary
or secondary.
Waste Material other
than coal. Also called spoil.
Working section From
the faces to the point where coal is
loaded onto belts or rail cars to begin
its trip to the outside.
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