Conference Proceedings
The AusIMM Proceedings 1944
Conference Proceedings
The AusIMM Proceedings 1944
The Application of Hydraulic Stowing Partially Deslimed Mill Residue in Stopes at Broken Hill South Limited
CONTENTS: Broken Hill The mixing stations.Operating and mixing apparatus.Pulp distribution.Stope preparation.Filling procedure.Consolidation of old fill.Drainage:Pulp density tests. Life of sand pipe lines.Results.Advantages and disadvantages.Conclusion and acknowledgments.General remarks on South Limited.Mining methods.History of stope filling in Broken Hill.Need for a new and better filling method and transport system.Initial experiments with hydraulic stowing.Source of the sand.Water Supply.Signalling system.GENERAL REMARKS ON BROKEN HILL SOUTH LIMITEDThe South Mine, property of Broken Hill South Limited, is situated at Broken Hill, N.S.W., Australia, towards the southern end of the main lode.The leases (M.L's 7 and 8)' cover a length of 2,400 feet along the lode outcrop and the workings extend, at this date, to a depth of 1,940 feet below the collar of the original main shaft and to 825 feet below sea level.Mining operations have been continuous for about 58 years and during this period nearly 12.5 million tons of ore have been mined. The monthly tonnage extracted approximates 30,000 tons in normal times.The ore is a mixed sulphide containing galena and marmatite; the gangue minerals are principally calcite, rhodonite, quartz and garnet.A typical assay for a monthly period is 1440/0 Pb., 56 ozs. Ag., and 11 60/0 Zn. The whole of the ore is concentrated on the property by combined gravity and flotation methods. The lead and 'zinc concentrates produced are railed to other centres for the extraction of the contained metals.MINING METHODSMining practice throughout the field varies only in minor details. The ore-bodies forming the Broken Hill Lode lie within complex folds arranged along a shear and vary in size and mineralogical associations, but all the mines have similar types. Some of the ore-bodies have weak walls, but the chief difficulty in mining is caused by "heads" and "flaws" in the ore.Besides these local weak areas there are ground movements-referred to later-of varying magnitude extending throughout the central portion of the lode where the large ore-bodies, several hundred feet wide, approached the surface.
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A B Black
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The Application of Hydraulic Stowing Partially Deslimed Mill Residue in Stopes at Broken Hill South LimitedPDFThis product is exclusive to Digital library subscription
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- Published: 1944
- PDF Size: 1.928 Mb.
- Unique ID: P_PROC1944_0568