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Home>> The Industry>> Coal Mining>> Methods>> Surface Mining |
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Surface Mining | |||
Surface mining is best suited to widespread fault seams of
materials, such as clay and coal, or compact near-surface
bodies, such as some types of uranium. The choice of open pit
mining or underground mining in the case of uranium depends on
the depth of the deposit, how easily the rocks and soil on top
of the ore can be removed and,
Surface mining is generally less costly and more flexible
than underground mining. This type of mining also recovers a
higher percentage of coal in a deposit. This type of mining
involves removing the topsoil or surface earth, also called
overburden, from the area to be mined. This is often done with
huge draglines that have buckets. The cover soil removed is
stockpiled for later reclamation. Up to 69 cubic metres of earth
may be removed, all at one time. Sometimes the use of explosives
is required to crumble the overburden. Stripping the topsoil
reveals the coal seam. The coal seam is then mined
Generally, extraction technology in non-mountainous areas involves the use of massive draglines in order to remove the overburden and expose the coal seams. Power shovels and trucks are used to haul the coal to a nearby processing facility. Some general environmental pressures include noise levels (machinery, blasting), air quality (coal dust), water quality and stream diversions, soil and vegetation removal. Reclamation of open pit coal mines tends to be more difficult in mountainous areas because of the naturally shallow soil depth and greater variations in topography. |
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