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Combining modern assessment methods to improve understanding of longwall geomechanics

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-13, 08:42 authored by M Kelly, W Gale, P Hatherly, R Balusu, X Luo
Ongoing, collaborative research between CSIRO's Exploration and Mining and Strata Control Technology has resulted in a better understanding of rock failure mechanisms around longwall extraction. Failure has occurred further ahead of the retreating face than predicted by conventional longwall geomechanics theory. In some cases significant failure has been detected several hundred metres ahead of the face position with demonstrated influences of minor geological discontinuities. Shear, rather than tensile failure has been the predominant failure mechanism in the environments monitored. Validating technologies of microseismic monitoring and new face monitoring techniques have assisted the development of predictive 2D computational modelling tools. The demonstrated 3D consequences of failure has assisted in the ongoing direction of the project to further investigate these effects.

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Citation

This conference paper was originally published as Kelly, M, Gale, W, Hatherly, P, Balusu, R and Luo, X, Combining modern assessment methods to improve understanding of longwall geomechanics, in Aziz, N (ed), Coal 1998: Coal Operators' Conference, University of Wollongong & the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1998, 523-535.

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English

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