| Mining Terminology
Abutment - In coal mining, the weight of the rocks
above a narrow roadway is transferred to the solid coal
along the sides, which act as abutments of the arch
of strata spanning the roadway; and the weight of the
rocks over a long wall face is transferred to the front
abutment, that is, the solid coal ahead of the face
and the back abutment, that is, the settled packs behind
the face
Acid deposition or acid rain Referring loosely
to mixtures of wet and dry deposited material from the
atmosphere containing higher than normal amount of nitric
and sulfuric acids. The precursors or chemical forerunners
of acid rain formation result from both natural sources,
such as volcanoes and decaying vegetation, and man-made
sources, primarily emissions of sulfur and nitrogen
oxides resulting from fossil fuel combustion.
Acid mine water - Mine water that contains free sulfuric
acid and mainly due to the weathering of iron pyrites.
Active workings - Any place in a mine where a miner
is normally required to work or travel and which are
ventilated and inspected regularly
Adit - A nearly horizontal passage from the surface
by which a mine is entered and de-watered.
Advance - Mining in the same directions, or order of
sequence
Air split - The division of a current of air into two
or more parts.
Airway - Any passage through which air is carried.
Anemometer - Instrument for measuring air velocities
Angle of dip - The angle at which strata or mineral
deposits are inclined to the horizontal plane.
Angle of repose - The maximum angle from horizontal
at which a given material will rest on a given surface
without sliding or rolling
Anticline - An upward fold or arch of rock strata.
Aquifer - A water-bearing bed of porous rock, often
sandstone.
Arching - Fracture processes around a mine opening,
leading to stabilization by an arching effect.
Area of an airway - Average width multiplied by average
height of airway normally expressed in sq ft.
Auger - A rotary drill that uses a screw device to
penetrate, break, and then transport the drilled material
for example coal.
Auxiliary operations - All activities supportive of
but not contributing directly to mining.
Auxiliary ventilation - Portion of main ventilating
current directed to face of dead end entry by means
of an auxiliary fan and tubing
Azimuth - A survey term that references the angle measured
clockwise from any meridian . The bearing is used to
designate direction. The bearing of a line is the acute
horizontal angle between the meridian and the line.
B
Back - The roof or upper part in any underground mining
cavities
Backfill Mine waste or rock used to support
the roof after coal removal.
Barren - Said of rock or vein material containing no
minerals of value, and of strata without coal, or containing
coal in seams too thin to be workable.
Barricading - Enclosing part of a mine to prevent inflow
of noxious gasses from a mine fire or an explosion.
Barrier - Something that bars or keeps out. 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.
Beam building - The creation of a strong, inflexible
beam by bolting or otherwise fastening together several
weaker layers. In coal mining this is the intended basis
for roof bolting.
Bearing A surveying term used to designate direction.
The bearing of a line is the acute horizontal angle
between the meridian and the line. The meridian is an
established line of reference. Azimuths are angles measured
clockwise from any meridian.
Bearing plate - A plate used to distribute a given
load.
Bed - A stratum of coal or other deposit.
Belt conveyor - A looped belt on which coal or other
materials can be carried and which is generally constructed
of flame-resistant material
Belt idler - A roller usually of cylindrical shape
which is supported on a frame and which in turn supports
or guides a conveyor belt.
Bench - One of to or more divisions of a coal seam
separated by slate or formed by the process of cutting
the coal
Beneficiation - The treatment of mined material making
it richer or more concentrated
Berm - A pile or mound of material capable of restraining
a vehicle.
Binder - A streak of impurity in a coal seam.
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. A bit may be either detachable from or
integral with its supporting drill rod.
Bituminous coal A middle rank coal 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.
Strictly speaking, 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. Alt:
Exhaust ventilation lateral.
Bolt torque - The turning force in foot-pounds applied
to a roof bolt to achieve an installed tension.
Borehole - Any deep or long drill-hole, usually associated
with a diamond drill.
Bottom - Floor or underlying surface of an underground
excavation.
Boss - Any member of the managerial ranks who is directly
in charge of miners (e.g., "shift-boss," "face-boss,"
"fire-boss," etc.).
Box-type magazine - A small, portable magazine used
to store limited quantities of explosives or detonators
for short periods of time at locations in the mine which
are convenient to the blasting sites at which they will
be used.
Brattice or brattice cloth - Fire-resistant fabric
or plastic partition used in a mine passage to confine
the air and force it into the working place. Also termed
"line brattice," "line canvas,"
or "line curtain."
Break line - The line that roughly follows the rear
edges of coal pillars that are being mined. The line
along which the roof of a coal mine is expected to break.
Breakthrough - A passage for ventilation that is cut
through the pillars between rooms.
Bridge carrier - A rubber-tire-mounted mobile conveyor,
about 10 meters long, used as an intermediate unit to
create a system of articulated conveyors between a mining
machine and a room or entry conveyor.
Bridge conveyor - A short conveyor hung from the boom
of mining or lading machine or haulage system with the
other end attached to a receiving bin that dollies along
a frame supported by the room or entry conveyor, tailpiece.
Thus, as the machine boom moves, the bridge conveyor
keeps it in constant connection with the tailpiece.
Brow - A low place in the roof of a mine, giving insufficient
headroom.
Brushing - Digging up the bottom or taking down the
top to give more headroom in roadways.
Btu British thermal unit. A measure of the energy
required to raise the temperature of one pound of water
one degree Fahrenheit.
Bug dust - The fine particles of coal or other material
resulting form the boring or cutting of the coal face
by drill or machine.
Bump (or burst) - A violent dislocation of the mine
workings which is attributed to severe stresses in the
rock surrounding the workings.
Butt cleat - A short, poorly defined vertical cleavage
plane in a coal seam, usually at right angles to the
long face cleat.
Butt entry - A coal mining term that has different
meanings in different locations. It can be synonymous
with panel entry, submain entry, or in its older sense
it refers to an entry that is "butt" onto
the coal cleavage (that is, at right angles to the face).
C
Cage - In a mine shaft, the device, similar to an elevator
car, that is used for hoisting personnel and materials.
Calorific value - The quantity of heat that can be
liberated from one pound of coal or oil measured in
BTU's.
Cannel coal - A massive, non-caking block coal with
a fine, even grain and a conchoidal fracture which has
a high percentage of hydrogen, burns with a long, yellow
flame, and is extremely easy to ignite.
Canopy - A protective covering of a cab on a mining
machine.
Cap - A miner's safety helmet. Also, a highly sensitive,
encapsulated explosive that is used to detonate larger
but less sensitive explosives.
Cap block - A flat piece of wood inserted between the
top of the prop and the roof to provide bearing support.
Car - A railway wagon, especially any of the wagons
adapted to carrying coal, ore, and waste underground.
Car-dump - The mechanism for unloading a loaded car.
Carbide bit - More correctly, cemented tungsten carbide.
A cutting or drilling bit for rock or coal, made by
fusing an insert of molded tungsten carbide to the cutting
edge of a steel bit shank.
Cast - A directed throw; in strip-mining, the overburden
is cast from the coal to the previously mined area.
Certified - Describes a person who has passed an examination
to do a required job.
Chain conveyor - A conveyor on which the material is
moved along solid pans (troughs) by the action of scraper
crossbars attached to powered chains.
Chain pillar - The pillar of coal left to protect the
gangway or entry and the parallel airways.
Check curtain - Sheet of brattice cloth hung across
an airway to control the passage of the air current.
Chock - Large hydraulic jacks used to support roof
in longwall and shortwall mining systems.
Clay vein - A body of clay-like material that fills
a void in a coal bed.
Cleat - The vertical cleavage of coal seams. The main
set of joints along which coal breaks when mined.
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 A comprehensive
set of amendments to the federal law governing the nation's
air quality. The Clean Air Act was originally passed
in 1970 to address significant air pollution problems
in our cities. The 1990 amendments broadened and strengthened
the original law to address specific problems such as
acid deposition, urban smog, hazardous air pollutants
and stratospheric ozone depletion.
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. British term is "colliery".
Coal reserves - Measured tonnages of coal that have
been calculated to occur in a coal seam within a particular
property.
Coal washing The process of separating undesirable
materials from coal based on differences in densities.
Pyritic sulfur, or sulfur combined with iron, is heavier
and sinks in water; coal is lighter and floats.
Coke A hard, dry carbon substance produced by
heating coal to a very high temperature in the absence
of air.
Collar - The term applied to the timbering or concrete
around the mouth or top of a shaft. The beginning point
of a shaft or drill hole at the surface.
Colliery - British name for coal mine.
Column flotation A precombustion coal cleaning
technology in which coal particles attach to air bubbles
rising in a vertical column. The coal is then removed
at the top of the column.
Comminution - The breaking, crushing, or grinding of
coal, ore, or rock.
Competent rock - Rock which, because of its physical
and geological characteristics, is capable of sustaining
openings without any structural support except pillars
and walls left during mining (stalls, light props, and
roof bolts are not considered structural support).
Contact - The place or surface where two different
kinds of rocks meet. Applies to sedimentary rocks, as
the contact between a limestone and a sandstone, for
example, and to metamorphic rocks; and it is especially
applicable between igneous intrusions and their walls.
Continuous miner - A machine that constantly extracts
coal while it loads it. 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 fully-mechanized
underground mining method involving the insertion of
explosives in a coal seam, the blasting of the seam,
and the removal of 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.
Cover - The overburden of any deposit.
Creep - The forcing of pillars into soft bottom by
the weight of a strong roof. In surface mining, a very
slow movement of slopes downhill.
Crib - A roof support of prop timbers or ties, laid
in alternate cross-layers, log-cabin style. It may or
may not be filled with debris. Also may be called a
chock or cog.
Cribbing - The construction of cribs or timbers laid
at right angles to each other, sometimes filled with
earth, as a roof support or as a support for machinery.
Crop coal - Coal at the outcrop of the seam. It is
usually considered of inferior quality due to partial
oxidation, although this is not always the case.
Crossbar - The horizontal member of a roof timber set
supported by props located either on roadways or at
the face.
Crosscut - A passageway driven between the entry and
its parallel air course or air courses for ventilation
purposes. Also, a tunnel driven from one seam to another
through or across the intervening measures; sometimes
called "crosscut tunnel", or "breakthrough".
In vein mining, an entry perpendicular to the vein.
Cross entry - An entry running at an angle with the
main entry.
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.
Cutter; Cutting machine - A machine, usually used in
coal, that will cut a 10- to 15-cm slot. The slot allows
room for expansion of the broken coal. Also applies
to the man who operates the machine and to workers engaged
in the cutting of coal by pick or drill.
Cycle mining - A system of mining in more than one
working place at a time, that is, a miner takes a lift
from the face and moves to another face while permanent
roof support is established in the previous working
face.
D
Demonstrated reserves A collective term for
the sum of coal in both measured and indicated resources
and reserves.
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.
Detectors - Specialized chemical or electronic instruments
used to detect mine gases.
Detonator - A device containing a small detonating
charge that is used for detonating an explosive, including,
but not limited to, blasting caps, exploders, electric
detonators, and delay electric blasting caps.
Development mining - Work undertaken to open up coal
reserves as distinguished from the work of actual coal
extraction.
Diffusion - Blending of a gas and air, resulting in
a homogeneous mixture. Blending of two or more gases.
Diffuser fan - A fan mounted on a continuous miner
to assist and direct air delivery from the machine to
the face.
Dilute - To lower the concentration of a mixture; in
this case the concentration of any hazardous gas in
mine air by addition of fresh intake air.
Dilution - The contamination of ore with barren wall
rock in stopping.
Dip - The inclination of a geologic structure (bed,
vein, fault, etc.) from the horizontal; dip is always
measured downwards at right angles to the strike.
Doppler
Flow meter A Doppler flowmeter is a device
used to measure flow rates or volumetric flow rates
of liquid slurry normally a clamp on /strap on device
or insert sensor type
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 dumps the material on a spoil bank,
in a hopper, or on a pile.
Drainage - The process of removing surplus ground or
surface water either by artificial means or by gravity
flow.
Draw slate - A soft slate, shale, or rock from approximately
1 cm to 10 cm thick and located immediately above certain
coal seams, which falls quite easily when the coal support
is withdrawn.
Drift - A horizontal passage underground. A drift follows
the vein, as distinguished from a crosscut that intersects
it, or a level or gallery, which may do either.
Drift mine An underground coal mine in which
the entry or access is above water level and generally
on the slope of a hill, driven horizontally into a coal
seam.
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.
Drilling - The use of such a machine to create holes
for exploration or for loading with explosives.
Dummy - A bag filled with sand, clay, etc., used for
stemming a charged hole.
Dump - To unload; specifically, 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.).
E
Electrical grounding - To connect with the ground to
make the earth part of the circuit.
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 the initial mining; same as "gate"
and "roadway," both British terms.
Evaluation - The work involved in gaining a knowledge
of the size, shape, position and value of coal.
Exploration - The search for mineral deposits and the
work done to prove or establish the extent of a mineral
deposit. Alt: Prospecting and subsequent evaluation.
Explosive - Any rapidly combustive or expanding substance.
The energy released during this rapid combustion or
expansion can be used to break rock.
Extraction - The process of mining and removal of cal
or ore from a mine.
F
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.
Face conveyor - Any conveyor used parallel to a working
face which delivers coal into another conveyor or into
a car.
Factor of safety - The ratio of the ultimate breaking
strength of the material to the force exerted against
it. If a rope will break under a load of 6000 lbs.,
and it is carrying a load of 2000 lbs., its factor of
safety is 6000 divided by 2000 which equals 3.
Fall - A mass of roof rock or coal which has fallen
in any part of a mine.
Fan, auxiliary - A small, portable fan used to supplement
the ventilation of an individual working place.
Fan, booster - A large fan installed in the main air
current, and thus in tandem with the main fan.
Fan signal - Automation device designed to give alarm
if the main fan slows down or stops.
Fault - A slip-surface between two portions of the
earth's surface that have moved relative to each other.
A fault is a failure surface and is evidence of severe
earth stresses.
Fault zone - A fault, instead of being a single clean
fracture, may be a zone hundreds or thousands of feet
wide. The fault zone consists of numerous interlacing
small faults or a confused zone of gouge, breccia, or
mylonite.
Feeder - A machine that feeds coal onto a conveyor
belt evenly.
Fill - Any material that is put back in place of the
extracted ore 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.
Fissure - An extensive crack, break, or fracture in
the rocks.
Fixed carbon The part of the carbon that remains
behind when coal is heated in a closed vessel until
all of the volatile matter is driven off.
Flat-lying - Said of deposits and coal seams with a
dip up to 5 degrees.
Flight - The metal strap or crossbar attached to the
drag chain-and-flight conveyor.
Float dust - Fine coal-dust particles carried in suspension
by air currents and eventually deposited in return entries.
Dust consisting of particles of coal that can pass through
a No. 200 sieve.
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.
Flue Gas Desulfurization Any of several forms
of chemical/physical processes that remove sulfur compounds
formed during coal combustion. The devices, commonly
called "scrubbers," combine the sulfur in
gaseous emissions with another chemical medium to form
inert "sludge" which must then be removed
for disposal.
Fluidized Bed Combustion A process with a high
degree of ability to remove sulfur from coal during
combustion. Crushed coal and limestone are suspended
in the bottom of a boiler by an upward stream of hot
air. The coal is burned in this bubbling, liquid-like
(or "fluidized") mixture. Rather than released
as emissions, sulfur from combustion gases combines
with the limestone to form a solid compound recovered
with the ash.
Fly ash The finely divided particles of ash
suspended in gases resulting from the combustion of
fuel. Electrostatic precipitators are used to remove
fly ash from the gases prior to the release from a power
plant's smokestack.
Formation Any assemblage of rocks which have
some character in common, whether of origin, age, or
composition. Often, the word is loosely used to indicate
anything that has been formed or brought into its present
shape.
Fossil fuel Any naturally occurring fuel of
an organic nature, such as coal, crude oil and natural
gas.
Fracture - A general term to include any kind of discontinuity
in a body of rock if produced by mechanical failure,
whether by shear stress or tensile stress. Fractures
include faults, shears, joints, and planes of fracture
cleavage.
Friable - Easy to break, or crumbling naturally. Descriptive
of certain rocks and minerals.
Fuse - A cord-like substance used in the ignition of
explosives. Black powder is entrained in the cord and,
when lit, burns along the cord at a set rate. A fuse
can be safely used to ignite a cap, which is the primer
for an explosive.
G
Gallery - A horizontal or a nearly horizontal underground
passage, either natural or artificial.
Gasification Any of various processes by which
coal is turned into low, medium, or high Btu gases.
Gathering conveyor; gathering belt - Any conveyor which
is used to gather coal from other conveyors and deliver
it either into mine cars or onto another conveyor. The
term is frequently used with belt conveyors placed in
entries where a number of room conveyors deliver coal
onto the belt.
Geologist - One who studies the constitution, structure,
and history of the earth's crust, conducting research
into the formation and dissolution of rock layers, analyzing
fossil and mineral content of layers, and endeavoring
to fix historical sequence of development by relating
characteristics to known geological influences (historical
geology).
Gob - The term applied to that part of the mine from
which the coal has been removed and the space more or
less filled up with waste. Also, the loose waste in
a mine. Also called goaf.
Global climate change This term usually refers
to the gradual warming of the earth caused by the greenhouse
effect. Many believe this is the result of man-made
emissions of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide,
chlorofluorocarbons (CFC) and methane.
Grain - In petrology, that factor of the texture of
a rock composed of distinct particles or crystals which
depends upon their absolute size.
Grizzly - Course screening or scalping device that
prevents oversized bulk material form entering a material
transfer system; constructed of rails, bars, beams,
etc.
Ground control - The regulation and final arresting
of the closure of the walls of a mined area. The term
generally refers to measures taken to prevent roof falls
or coal bursts.
Ground pressure - The pressure to which a rock formation
is subjected by the weight of the superimposed rock
and rock material or by diastrophic forces created by
movements in the rocks forming the earth's crust. Such
pressures may be great enough to cause rocks having
a low compressional strength to deform and be squeezed
into and close a borehole or other underground opening
not adequately strengthened by an artificial support,
such as casing or timber.
Gunite - A cement applied by spraying to the roof and
sides of a mine passage.
H
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.
Headframe - The structure surmounting the shaft which
supports the hoist rope pulley, and often the hoist
itself.
Heading - A vein above a drift. An interior level or
airway driven in a mine. In longwall workings, a narrow
passage driven upward from a gangway in starting a working
in order to give a loose end.
Head section - A term used in both belt and chain conveyor
work to designate that portion of the conveyor used
for discharging material.
Heaving - Applied to the rising of the bottom after
removal of the coal; a sharp rise in the floor is called
a "hogsback".
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.
Hogsback - A sharp rise in the floor of a seam.
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.
Horizon - In geology, any given definite position or
interval in the stratigraphic column or the scheme of
stratigraphic classification; generally used in a relative
sense.
Horseback - A mass of material with a slippery surface
in the roof; shaped like a horse's back.
Hydraulic - Of or pertaining to fluids in motion. Hydraulic
cement has a composition which permits it to set quickly
under water. Hydraulic jacks lift through the force
transmitted to the movable part of the jack by a liquid.
Hydraulic control refers to the mechanical control of
various parts of machines, such as coal cutters, loaders,
etc., through the operation or action of hydraulic cylinders.
Hydrocarbon A family of chemical compounds containing
carbon and hydrogen atoms in various combinations, found
especially in fossil fuels.
I
Inby - In the direction of the working face.
Incline - Any entry to a mine that is not vertical
(shaft) or horizontal (adit). Often incline is reserved
for those entries that are too steep for a belt conveyor
(+17 degrees -18 degrees), in which case a hoist and
guide rails are employed. A belt conveyor incline is
termed a slope. Alt: Secondary inclined opening, driven
upward to connect levels, sometimes on the dip of a
deposit; also called "inclined shaft".
Incompetent - Applied to strata, a formation, a rock,
or a rock structure not combining sufficient firmness
and flexibility to transmit a thrust and to lift a load
by bending.
Indicated coal resources Coal for which estimates
of the rank, quality, and quantity have been computed
partly from sample analyses and measurements and partly
from reasonable geologic projections. The points of
observation are ? to 1 ? miles apart. Indicated coal
is projected to extend as an ? mile wide belt that lies
more than ? mile from the outcrop or points of observation
or measurement.
Inferred coal resources Coal in unexplored extensions
of the demonstrated resources for which estimates of
the quality and size are based on geologic evidence
and projection. Quantitative estimates are based largely
on broad knowledge of the geologic character of the
deposit and for which there are few, if any, samples
or measurements. The estimates are based on an assumed
continuity or repletion of which there is geologic evidence;
this evidence may include comparison with deposits of
similar type. Bodies that are completely concealed may
be included if there is specific geologic evidence of
their presence. The points of observation are 1 ? to
6 miles apart.
In situ - In the natural or original position. Applied
to a rock, soil, or fossil when occurring in the situation
in which it was originally formed or deposited.
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 coalbed, requiring support during the excavation
of coal.
Isopach - A line, on a map, drawn through points of
equal thickness of a designated unit. Synonym for isopachous
line; isopachyte.
J
Jackleg - A percussion drill used for drifting or stopping
that is mounted on a telescopic leg which has an extension
of about 2.5 m. The leg and machine are hinged so that
the drill need not be in the same direction as the leg.
Jackrock A caltrop or other object manufactured
with one or more rounded or sharpened points, which
when placed or thrown present at least one point at
such an angle that it is peculiar to and designed for
use in puncturing or damaging vehicle tires. Jackrocks
are commonly used during labor disputes.
Job Safety Analysis (J.S.A.) - A job breakdown that
gives a safe, efficient job procedure.
Joint - A divisional plane or surface that divides
a rock and along which there has been no visible movement
parallel to the plane or surface.
K
Kettle bottom - A smooth, rounded piece of rock, cylindrical
in shape, which may drop out of the roof of a mine without
warning. The origin of this feature is thought to be
the remains of the stump of a tree that has been replaced
by sediments so that the original form has been rather
well preserved.
Kerf - The undercut of a coal face.
L
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. The proper layout of mine workings is
the responsibility of the manager aided by the planning
department.
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.
Lithology - The character of a rock described in terms
of its structure, color, mineral composition, grain
size, and arrangement of its component parts; all those
visible features that in the aggregate impart individuality
of the rock. Lithology is the basis of correlation in
coal mines and commonly is reliable over a distance
of a few miles.
Load - To place explosives in a drill hole. Also, to
transfer broken material into a haulage device.
Loading machine - Any device for transferring excavated
coal into the haulage equipment.
Loading pocket - Transfer point at a shaft where bulk
material is loaded by bin, hopper, and chute into a
skip.
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 that is usually
several hundred feet long. The loosened coal falls onto
a conveyor for removal from the mine.
Loose coal - Coal fragments larger in size than coal
dust.
Low voltage - Up to and including 660 volts by federal
standards.
M
Main entry - A main haulage road. Where the coal has
cleats, main entries are driven at right angles to the
face cleats.
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 miner can be safe
from passing locomotives and car. Also called a refuge
hole.
Man trip - A carrier of mine personnel, by rail or
rubber tire, to and from the work area.
Manway - An entry used exclusively for personnel to
travel form the shaft bottom or drift mouth to the working
section; it is always on the intake air side in gassy
mines. Also, a small passage at one side or both sides
of a breast, used as a traveling way for the miner,
and sometimes, as an airway, or chute, or both.
Measured coal resources Coal for which estimates
of the rank, quality, and quantity have been computed
from sample analyses and measurements from closely spaced
and geologically well-known sample sites, such as outcrops,
trenches, mine workings, and drill holes. The points
of observation and measurement are so closely spaced
and the thickness and extent of coals are so well defined
that the tonnage is judged to be accurate within 20
percent of true tonnage. Although the spacing of the
points of observation necessary to demonstrate continuity
of the coal differs from region to region according
to the character of the coal beds, the points of observation
are no greater than ? mile apart. Measured coal is projected
to extend as a ?-mile wide belt from the outcrop or
points of observation or measurement.
Meridian - A surveying term that establishes
a line of reference. The bearing is used to designate
direction. The bearing of a line is the acute horizontal
angle between the meridian and the line. Azimuths are
angles measured clockwise from any meridian.
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.
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 ore extraction.
These operations include tunneling, sinking, cross-cutting,
drifting, and raising.
Mine mouth electric plant A coal burning electric-generating
plant built near a coal mine.
Miner - One who is engaged in the business or occupation
of extracting ore, coal, precious substances, or other
natural materials from the earth's crust.
Mineral - An inorganic compound occurring naturally
in the earth's crust, with a distinctive set of physical
properties, and a definite chemical composition.
Mining Engineer - A person qualified by education,
training, and experience in mining engineering. A trained
engineer with knowledge of the science, economics, and
arts of mineral location, extraction, concentration
and sale, and the administrative and financial problems
of practical importance in connection with the profitable
conduct of mining.
Misfire - The complete or partial failure of a blasting
charge to explode as planned.
MSHA - Mine Safety and Health Administration; the federal
agency which regulates coal mine health and safety.
Mud cap - A charge of high explosive fired in contact
with the surface of a rock after being covered with
a quantity of wet mud, wet earth, or sand, without any
borehole being used. Also termed adobe, dobie, and sandblast
(illegal in coal mining).
N
Natural ventilation - Ventilation of a mine without
the aid of fans or furnaces.
Nip - Device at the end of the trailing cable of a
mining machine used for connecting the trailing cable
to the trolley wire and ground.
O
Open end pillaring - A method of mining pillars in
which no stump is left; the pockets driven are open
on the gob side and the roof is supported by timber.
Outby; outbye - Nearer to the shaft, and hence farther
from the working face. Toward the mine entrance. The
opposite of inby.
Outcrop Coal that appears at or near the surface.
Overburden Layers of soil and rock covering
a coal seam. Overburden is removed prior to surface
mining and replaced after the coal is taken from the
seam.
Overcast (undercast) - Enclosed airway which permits
one air current to pass over (under) another without
interruption.
P
Panel - A coal mining block that generally comprises
one operating unit.
Panic bar - A switch, in the shape of a bar, used to
cut off power at the machine in case of an emergency.
Parting - (1) A small joint in coal or rock; (2) a
layer of rock in a coal seam; (3) a side track or turnout
in a haulage road.
Peat The partially decayed plant matter found
in swamps and bogs, one of the earliest stages of coal
formation.
Percentage extraction - The proportion of a coal seam
which is removed from the mine. The remainder may represent
coal in pillars or coal which is too thin or inferior
to mine or lost in mining. Shallow coal mines working
under townships, reservoirs, etc., may extract 50%,
or less, of the entire seam, the remainder being left
as pillars to protect the surface. Under favorable conditions,
longwall mining may extract from 80 to 95% of the entire
seam. With pillar methods of working, the extraction
ranges from 50 to 90% depending on local conditions.
Percussion drill - A drill, usually air powered, that
delivers its energy through a pounding or hammering
action.
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 the 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.
Piggy-back - A bridge conveyor.
Pillar - An area of coal left to support the overlying
strata in a mine; sometimes left permanently to support
surface structures.
Pillar robbing - The systematic removal of the coal
pillars between rooms or chambers to regulate the subsidence
of the roof. Also termed "bridging back" the
pillar, "drawing" the pillar, or "pulling"
the pillar.
Pinch - A compression of the walls of a vein or the
roof and floor of a coal seam so as to "squeeze"
out the coal.
Pinch A compression of the roof and floor of
a coal seam so as to "squeeze" out the coal.
Pinning - Roof bolting.
Pitch - The inclination of a seam; the rise of a seam.
Plan - A map showing features such as mine workings
or geological structures on a horizontal plane.
Pneumoconiosis - A chronic disease of the lung arising
from breathing coal dust.
Portal - The structure surrounding the immediate entrance
to a mine; the mouth of an adit or tunnel.
Portal bus - Track-mounted, self-propelled personnel
carrier that holds 8 to 12 people.
Post - The vertical member of a timber set.
Preparation plant - A place where coal is cleaned,
sized, and prepared for market.
Primary roof - The main roof above the immediate top.
Its thickness may vary from a few to several thousand
feet.
Primer (booster) - A package or cartridge of explosive
which is designed specifically to transmit detonation
to other explosives and which does not contain a detonator.
Prop - Coal mining term for any single post used as
roof support. Props may be timber or steel; if steel--screwed,
yieldable, or hydraulic.
Proximate analysis - A physical, or non-chemical, test
of the constitution of coal. Not precise, but very useful
for determining the commercial value. Using the same
sample (1 gram) under controlled heating at fixed temperatures
and time periods, moisture, volatile matter, fixed carbon
and ash content are successfully determined. Sulfur
and Btu content are also generally reported with a proximate
analysis.
Pyrite - A hard, heavy, shiny, yellow mineral, FeS2
or iron disulfide, generally in cubic crystals. Also
called iron pyrites, fool's gold, sulfur balls. Iron
pyrite is the most common sulfide found in coal mines.
R
Raise - A secondary or tertiary inclined opening, vertical
or near-vertical opening driven upward form a level
to connect with the level above, or to explore the ground
for a limited distance above one level.
Ramp - A secondary or tertiary inclined opening, driven
to connect levels, usually driven in a downward direction,
and used for haulage.
Ranks of coal The classification of coal by
degree of hardness, moisture and heat content. "Anthracite"
is hard coal, almost pure carbon, used mainly for heating
homes. "Bituminous" is soft coal. It is the
most common coal found in the United States and is used
to generate electricity and to make coke for the steel
industry. "Subbituminous" is a coal with a
heating value between bituminous and lignite. It has
low fixed carbon and high percentages of volatile matter
and moisture. "Lignite" is the softest coal
and has the highest moisture content. It is used for
generating electricity and for conversion into synthetic
gas. In terms of Btu or "heating" content,
anthracite has the highest value, followed by bituminous,
subbituminous and lignite.
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 has been 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 or
ore mined from the original seam or deposit.
Red dog - A nonvolatile combustion product of the oxidation
of coal or coal refuse. Most commonly applied to material
resulting from in situ, uncontrolled burning of coal
or coal refuse piles. It is similar to coal ash.
Regulator - Device (wall, door) used to control the
volume of air in an air split.
Reserve That portion of the identified coal
resource that can be economically mined at the time
of determination. The reserve is derived by applying
a recovery factor to that component of the identified
coal resource designated as the reserve base.
Resin bolting - A method of permanent roof support
in which steel rods are grouted with resin.
Resources Concentrations of coal in such forms
that economic extraction is currently or may become
feasible. Coal resources broken down by identified and
undiscovered resources. Identified coal resources are
classified as demonstrated and inferred. Demonstrated
resources are further broken down as measured and indicated.
Undiscovered resources are broken down as hypothetical
and speculative.
Respirable dust - Dust particles 5 microns or less
in size.
Respirable dust sample - A sample collected with an
approved coal mine dust sampler unit attached to a miner,
or so positioned as to measure the concentration of
respirable dust to which the miner is exposed, and operated
continuously over an entire work shift of such miner.
Retreat mining - A system of robbing pillars in which
the robbing line, or line through the faces of the pillars
being extracted, retreats from the boundary toward the
shaft or mine mouth.
Return - The air or ventilation that has passed through
all the working faces of a split.
Return idler - The idler or roller underneath the cover
or cover plates on which the conveyor belt rides after
the load which it was carrying has been dumped at the
head section and starts the return trip toward the foot
section.
Rib - The side of a pillar or the wall of an entry.
The solid coal on the side of any underground passage.
Same as rib pillar.
Rider - A thin seam of coal overlying a thicker one.
Ripper - A coal extraction machine that works by tearing
the coal from the face.
Rob - To extract pillars of coal previously left for
support.
Robbed out area - Describes that part of a mine from
which the pillars have been removed.
Roll - (1) A high place in the bottom or a low place
in the top of a mine passage, (2) a local thickening
of roof or floor strata, causing thinning of a coal
seam.
Roll protection - A framework, safety canopy, or similar
protection for the operator when equipment overturns.
Roof - The stratum of 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 (up to 4 feet long), 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 fall - A coal mine cave-in 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 coal is extracted.
Roof support Posts, jacks, roof bolts and beams
used to support the rock overlying a coal seam in an
underground mine. A good roof support plan is part of
mine safety and coal extraction.
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 which approximately half of the coal is left
in place to support the roof of the active mining area.
Large "pillars" are left while "rooms"
of coal are extracted.
Room neck - The short passage from the entry into a
room.
Round - Planned pattern of drill holes fired in sequence
in tunneling, shaft sinking, or stopping. First the
cut holes are fired, followed by relief, lifter, and
rib holes.
Royalty - The payment of a certain stipulated sum on
the mineral produced.
Rubbing surface - The total area (top, bottom, and
sides) of an airway.
Run-of-mine - Raw material as it exists in the mine;
average grade or quality.
S
Safety fuse - A train of powder enclosed in cotton,
jute yarn, or waterproofing compounds, which burns at
a uniform rate; used for firing a cap containing the
detonation compound which in turn sets off the explosive
charge.
Safety lamp - A lamp with steel wire gauze covering
every opening from the inside to the outside so as to
prevent the passage of flame should explosive gas be
encountered.
Sampling - Cutting a representative part of an ore
(or coal) deposit, which should truly represent its
average value.
Sandstone - A sedimentary rock consisting of quartz
sand united by some cementing material, such as iron
oxide or calcium carbonate.
Scaling - Removal of loose rock from the roof or walls.
This work is dangerous and a long bar (called a scaling
bar)is often used.
Scoop - A rubber tired-, battery- or diesel-powered
piece of equipment designed for cleaning runways and
hauling supplies.
Scrubber Any of several forms of chemical/physical
devices that remove sulfur compounds formed during coal
combustion. These devices, technically know as flue
gas de-sulfurization systems, combine the sulfur in
gaseous emissions with another chemical medium to form
inert "sludge," which must then be removed
for disposal.
Seam - A stratum or bed of coal.
Secondary roof - The roof strata immediately above
the coal bed requiring support during the excavating
of coal.
Section - A portion of the working area of a mine.
Selective mining - The object of selective mining is
to obtain a relatively high-grade mine product; this
usually entails the use of a much more expensive stopping
system and high exploration and development costs in
searching for and developing the separate bunches, stringers,
lenses, and bands of ore.
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 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 to it. 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. The length
of time a self-rescuer can be used is governed mainly
by the humidity in the mine air, usually between 30
minutes and one hour.
Severance The separation of a mineral interest
from other interests in the land by grant or reservation.
A mineral dead or grant of the land reserving a mineral
interest, by the landowner before leasing, accomplishes
a severance as does his execution of a mineral lease.
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.
Shale - A rock formed by consolidation of clay, mud,
or silt, having a laminated structure and composed of
minerals essentially unaltered since deposition.
Shearer - A mining machine for longwall faces that
uses a rotating action to "shear" the material
from the face as it progresses along the face.
Shift - The number of hours or the part of any day
worked.
Shortwall An underground mining method in which
small areas are worked (15 to 150 feet) by a continuous
miner in conjunction with the use of 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.
Sinking - The process by which a shaft is driven.
Skid - A track-mounted vehicle used to hold trips or
cars from running out of control. Also it is a flat-bottom
personnel or equipment carrier used in low coal.
Skip - A car being hoisted from a slope or shaft.
Slack - Small coal; the finest-sized soft coal, usually
less than one inch in diameter.
Slag - The waste product of the process of smelting.
Slate - A miner's term for any shale or slate accompanying
coal. Geologically, it is a dense, fine-textured, metamorphic
rock, which has excellent parallel cleavage so that
it breaks into thin plates or pencil-like shapes.
Slate bar - The proper long-handled tool used to pry
down loose and hazardous material from roof, face, and
ribs.
Slickenside - A smooth, striated, polished surface
produced on rock by friction.
Slip - A fault. A smooth joint or crack where the strata
have moved on each other.
Slope - Primary inclined opening, connection the surface
with the underground workings.
Slope mine An underground mine with an opening
that slopes upward or downward to the coal seam.
Sloughing - The slow crumbling and falling away of
material from roof, rib, and face.
Solid - Mineral that has not been undermined, sheared
out, or otherwise prepared for blasting.
Sounding - Knocking on a roof to see whether it is
sound and safe to work under.
Spad A spad is a flat spike hammered into a
wooden plug anchored in a hole drilled into the mine
ceiling from which is threaded a plumbline. The spad
is an underground survey station similar to the use
of stakes in marking survey points on the surface. A
pointer spad, or sight spad, is a station that allows
a mine foreman to visually align entries or breaks from
the main spad.
Span - The horizontal distance between the side supports
or solid abutments along sides of a roadway.
Specific gravity - The weight of a substance compared
with the weight of an equal volume of pure water at
4 degrees Celsius.
Split - Any division or branch of the ventilating current.
Also, the workings ventilated by one branch. Also, to
divide a pillar by driving one or more roads through
it.
Squeeze - The settling, without breaking, of the roof
and the gradual upheaval of the floor of a mine due
to the weight of the overlying strata.
Steeply inclined - Said of deposits and coal seams
with a dip of from 0.7 to 1 rad (40 degrees to 60 degrees).
Stemming - The noncombustible material used on top
or in front of a charge or explosive.
Strike - The direction of the line of intersection
of a bed or vein with the horizontal plane. The strike
of a bed is the direction of a straight line that connects
two points of equal elevation on the bed.
Stripping ratio The unit amount of overburden
that must be removed to gain access to a similar unit
amount of coal or mineral material.
Stump - Any small pillar.
Subbituminous Coal of a rank intermediate 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.
Sump - The bottom of a shaft, or any other place in
a mine, that is used as a collecting point for drainage
water.
Sumping - To force the cutter bar of a machine into
or under the coal. Also called a sumping cut, or sumping
in.
Support - The all-important function of keeping the
mine workings open. As a verb, it refers to this function;
as a noun it refers to all the equipment and materials--timber,
roof bolts, concrete, steel, etc.--that are used to
carry out this function.
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.
Suspension - Weaker strata hanging from stronger, overlying
strata by means of roof bolts.
Syncline - A fold in rock in which the strata dip inward
from both sides toward the axis. The opposite of anticline.
T
Tailgate - A subsidiary gate road to a conveyor face
as opposed to a main gate. The tailgate commonly acts
as the return airway and supplies road to the face.
Tailpiece - Also known as foot section pulley. The
pulley or roller in the tail or foot section of a belt
conveyor around which the belt runs.
Tail section - A term used in both belt and chain conveyor
work to designate that portion of the conveyor at the
extreme opposite end from the delivery point. In either
type of conveyor it consists of a frame and either a
sprocket or a drum on which the chain or belt travels,
plus such other devices as may be required for adjusting
belt or chain tension.
Tension - The act of stretching.
Tertiary - Lateral or panel openings (e.g., ramp, crosscut).
Through-steel - A system of dust collection from rock
or roof drilling. The drill steel is hollow, and a vacuum
is applied at the base, pulling the dust through the
steel and into a receptacle on the machine.
Timber - A collective term for underground wooden supports.
Timbering - The setting of timber supports in mine
workings or shafts for protection against falls from
roof, face, or rib.
Timber set - A timber frame to support the roof, sides,
and sometimes the floor of mine roadways or shafts.
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.
Top - A mine roof; same as "back."
Torque wrench - A wrench that indicates, as on a dial,
the amount of torque (in units of foot-pounds) exerted
in tightening a roof bolt.
Tractor - A battery-operated piece of equipment that
pulls trailers, skids, or personnel carriers. Also used
for supplies.
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 - A vertical or inclined connection between
two or more levels and used as an ore pass.
Transfer point - Location in the materials handling
system, either haulage or hoisting, where bulk material
is transferred between conveyances.
Trip - A train of mine cars.
Troughing idlers - The idlers, located on the upper
framework of a belt conveyor, which support the loaded
belt. They are so mounted that the loaded belt forms
a trough in the direction of travel, which reduces spillage
and increases the carrying capacity of a belt for a
given width.
Tunnel - A horizontal, or near-horizontal, underground
passage, entry, or haulageway, that is open to the surface
at both ends. A tunnel (as opposed to an adit) must
pass completely through a hill or mountain.
U
Ultimate analysis - Precise determination, by chemical
means, of the elements and compounds in coal.
Undercut - To cut below or undermine the coal face
by chipping away the coal by pick or mining machine.
In some localities the terms "undermine" or
"underhole" are used.
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 station - An enlargement of an entry, drift,
or level at a shaft at which cages stop to receive and
discharge cars, personnel, and material. An underground
station is any location where stationary electrical
equipment is installed. This includes pump rooms, compressor
rooms, hoist rooms, battery-charging rooms, etc.
Unit train A long train of between 60 and 150
or more hopper cars, carrying only coal between a single
mine and destination.
Universal coal cutter - A type of coal cutting machine
which is designed to make horizontal cuts in a coal
face at any point between the bottom and top or to make
shearing cuts at any point between the two ribs of the
place. The cutter bar can be twisted to make cuts at
any angle to the horizontal or vertical.
Upcast shaft - A shaft through which air leaves the
mine.
V
Valuation - The act or process of valuing or of estimating
the value or worth; appraisal.
Velocity - Rate of airflow in lineal feet per minute.
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.
Virgin - Unworked; untouched; often said of areas where
there has been no coal mining.
Void - A general term for pore space or other reopenings
in rock. In addition to pore space, the term includes
vesicles, solution cavities, or any openings either
primary or secondary.
Volatile matter - The gaseous part, mostly hydrocarbons,
of coal.
W
Waste - That rock or mineral which must be removed
from a mine to keep the mining scheme practical, but
which has no value.
Water Gauge (standard U-tube) - Instrument that measures
differential pressures in inches of water.
Wedge - A piece of wood tapering to a thin edge and
used for tightening in conventional timbering.
Weight - Fracturing and lowering of the roof strata
at the face as a result of mining operations, as in
"taking weight".
White damp - Carbon monoxide, CO. A gas that may be
present in the afterdamp of a gas- or coal-dust explosion,
or in the gases given off by a mine fire; also one of
the constituents of the gases produced by blasting.
Rarely found in mines under other circumstances. It
is absorbed by the hemoglobin of the blood to the exclusion
of oxygen. One-tenth of 1% (.001) may be fatal in 10
minutes.
Width - The thickness of a lode measured at right angles
to the dip.
Winning - The excavation, loading, and removal of coal
or ore from the ground; winning follows development.
Winze - Secondary or tertiary vertical or near-vertical
opening sunk from a point inside a mine for the purpose
of connecting with a lower level or of exploring the
ground for a limited depth below a level.
Wire rope - A steel wire rope used for winding in shafts
and underground haulages. Wire ropes are made from medium
carbon steels. Various constructions of wire rope are
designated by the number of strands in the rope and
the number of wires in each strand. The following are
some common terms encountered: airplane strand; cablelaid
rope; cane rope; elevator rope; extra-flexible hoisting
rope; flat rope; flattened-strand rope; guy rope; guy
strand; hand rope; haulage rope; hawser; hoisting rope;
lang lay rope; lay; left lay rope; left twist; nonspinning
rope; regular lay; reverse-laid rope; rheostat rope;
right lay; right twist; running rope; special flexible
hoisting rope; standing rope; towing hawser; transmission
rope.
Working - When a coal seam is being squeezed by pressure
from roof and floor, it emits creaking noises and is
said to be "working". This often serves as
a warning to the miners that additional support is needed.
Working face - Any place in a mine where material is
extracted during a mining cycle.
Working place - From the outby side of the last open
crosscut to the face.
Workings - The entire system of openings in a mine
for the purpose of exploitation.
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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