Conference Proceedings
Life-of-Mine Conference 2014
Conference Proceedings
Life-of-Mine Conference 2014
The Legacy of Underground Coal Mining - Mine Subsidence: Ipswich Coal Measures Case Study
The legacy of underground coal mining may be a land surface which, in parts, may be unstable in the long term. A case study analysis has been undertaken to explain some of the hazards and how the risk may be assessed and managed.The Ipswich Coal Measures were extensively mined with shallow underground workings, which now underlie a number of suburbs in the eastern side of the city of Ipswich in south eastern Queensland. The area was subject to underground mining from the 1840s to 1997. In general, the mines were small, family-owned operations that were restricted by complex geology, interactions with neighbouring operations and ownership of surface facilities. The oldest available mine plans date back to the late 1890s.The residents in these mining areas have a long history of unexpected mining subsidence events. A level of risk management for property owners has been implemented by the Ipswich City Council, which requires a mining subsidence risk assessment to be submitted as part of building applications for property development in the areas suspected of having mining subsidence risk. This discussion examines a series of generic subsidence events and how the risk may be assessed and managed and the hazard controlled.CITATION:Ham, BW, 2014. The legacy of underground coal mining - mine subsidence: Ipswich coal measures case study, in Proceedings Life-of-Mine 2014 , pp 113-120 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Contributor(s):
B W Ham
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- Published: 2014
- PDF Size: 0.377 Mb.
- Unique ID: P201404012