Mining Publication: Occurrence and Remediation of Coal Mine Bumps: A Historical Review
Original creation date: January 1995
One of the most difficult, longstanding engineering problems associated with coal mining is the catastrophic failure of cog mine structures known as bumps. For more than 70 years, researchers and practitioners have assembled a wealth of technical information on coal bumps in an attempt to understand and control them. However, many technical issues raised long ago are still being debated today. This paper examines past experiences and recognizes achievements in the realm of coal bumps. U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) researchers collected and analyzed 172 coal bump incident reports and compiled the pertinent statistics into a database. Actual field studied are also discussed. Examination of past experience has shown that there is no one set of defining characteristics that is responsible for coal bumps. In all cases, bumps occur when complex arrangements of geology, stress, and mining conditions interact to interfere with the orderly dissipation of stress. However, it is evident from the database that a tremendous reservoir of knowledge has been established from past experience that has unquestionably limited the severity of coal mine bumps in the United States.
Authors: AT Iannacchione, JC Zelanko
NIOSH/USBM Numbered Publication - January 1995
NIOSHTIC2 Number: 20024604
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines. Special Publication 01-95, NTIS No. PB95-211967, 1995; :27-67
See Also
- A Centennial of Mine Explosion Prevention Research
- Coal Mine Burst Prevention Controls
- Coal-Mine Ventilation Factors
- Diagnosing and Controlling Moisture-Sensitive Roof in Coal Mines
- The Effects of Roof and Floor Interface Slip on Coal Pillar Behavior
- The Explosibility of Coal Dust
- A Hybrid Statistical-Analytical Method for assessing Violent Failure in U.S. Coal Mines
- Proceedings: Mechanics and Mitigation of Violent Failure in Coal and Hard-Rock Mines
- Regional Bumps: Case Studies from the 1958 Bump Symposium
- Removing Methane (Degasification) from the Pittsburgh Coalbed in Northern West Virginia
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program