Linggo, Agosto 13, 2017

Mining Terms (miningquiz.com)

Glossary of Mining Terminology w

Image result for After Damp miningAfter Damp - Gasses resulting from underground combustion, normally carbon
monoxide. This is a loose term implying any fatal gas in a mine after an explosion or fire.
Image result for Air Shaft miningAir Shaft - A vertical opening into a mine for the passage of air.
Airway - Any passage in a mine along which an air current moves. Some passages are
driven solely for air. Other passages, such as a main level, are all purpose, to move air,
men, coal, and materials.
Anthracite - Coal of the highest metamorphic rank, in which the fixed carbon content is
between 92 percent and 98 percent. It is hard, black, and has a semi-metallic lustre and
semi-conchoidal fracture. It ignites with difficulty and burns with a short blue flame
without smoke.
Bank and Bankhead - The building at the entrance to a mine into which the coal boxes
are drawn and dumped into the mine screens, and from there to railway. The term is
loosely described as all the surface buildings.
Balance - An inclined passage running up at right angles from a main level, into the coal
seam, normally tracked with boxes drawn up by balance and lowered gravity. The term
gradually means a pair of passages, connected at the top, one of which is upcast and
the other is downcast for ventilation.
Barrier - The coal left at a mine or mine working.
Bearing In - Cutting a horizontal groove at the bottom or side of the coal face.

Bed - A separate stratum of coal or other natural deposit such as clay, rock or shale.
Bench - A horizontal section of coal seam included between parting of coal or shale.
Bituminous Coal - A coal that contains 15% to 20% volatile matter. It is dark brown to
black in colour and burns with a smoky flame. It is intermediate between sub-bituminous
and semi-bituminous coal.
Black Damp - Carbon dioxide gas, sometimes known as choke damp.

Blower - Gas discharged under pressure from a vein in a coal seam.
Boghead Coal - A sapropelic coal resembling cannel coal in its physical properties but
containing algae, not spores. It rarely occurs in a pure state but rather in forms
transitional to cannel coal. A source of both oil and gas.
Boom - A wooden support of the mine roof, like a building rafter, that is set horizontally.
Bootleg Coal - The mining and/or selling of coal from an area not owned by the miner or
without the owner's permission.
Bord - A chamber excavated in coal, off a balance. In some coal fields, a bord is called a
room.
Bore Hole - A hole of small diameter drilled or bored to explore the strata beneath,
above, beside or ahead.
Box - A mine car or wagon into which coal is loaded at the face and from there is
transported to the surface.
Brattice - A partition normally made of canvas, but sometimes made of wood, to make
two airways where one existed before, and permit air to move in and out of the mine
area.
Break through - As for cross heading.
British Thermal Unit (B.T.U.) - Heat needed to raise one pound of water by one degree F
(252 calories).
Brusher - A workman (always an experienced miner) who keeps the roof, sides and
pavement of a passage in good repair.
Butty - A miner's working partner - also known as “buddy”.
Bullwheel - A wheel, operating freely, around which passes the rope in a balance -
gravity - power system. Most are equipped with brakes.
Cage - The elevator that transports the men from the bankhead into the mine.
Cannel Coal - A compact, tough sapropelic coal that contains spores and is
characterized by a dull, waxy lustre, conchoidal fracture and massiveness.
Carbon Ratio - Percentage of fixed carbon in coal.
Chainrunner - A workman who fastens and unfastens, as required, haulage cables to
trips, and whose signals direct the haulage engineer operator to stop the trip. The
chainrunner underground functions much as a guard brakeman on a railway.
Chamber - An excavation from which coal is taken, known also as a bord or room (in
Great Britain, it is known as breast).
Checkweighman - The miners representative, chosen by ballot, who checks the weight
of coal recovered in the miner's favour, when the coal boxes filled by the miners
underground are weighed at the bankhead.
Chock - Chuck, pack - a hardwood block, two or more feet long, six inches or more
square, used as a temporary roof support, normally in longwall operations and
withdrawn as the wall advances or retreats. In some longwall operations, chocks are left
to ease pressure of the crushed roof and prevent it spreading to the coal face.
Choke Damp - A loosely used term for carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide.
Cleat or Cleavage - The term applied to the natural forces, or planes of division, causing
coal to break up into more or less rectangular blocks.
Coal - A solid, brittle, stratified, combustible rock-like material formed by decomposition
of plant vegetation that has been submitted to compaction and induration.
Coal Analysis - The determination by chemical methods of the amounts of various
components of coal.
Coal Ash - Non-combustible material in coal.
Coal Bank - Exposed seam of coal.
Coal Basin - A coal field with a synclinal basin structure.
Coal Bump - Sudden outbursts of coal and rock that occur when stresses in a coal pillar,
left for support in underground workings, cause the pillar to rupture without warning,
sending coal and rock flying with explosive force.
Coal Caking - Coal that softens and binds together when heated and produces a hard
grey cellular coke.
Coal Carbonization - The heat treatment of coal in the absence of air at low
temperatures (450 to 700 degrees C) or high temperatures (900 to 1200 degrees C).
Coal Classification - The grouping of coals according to a particular property such as
degree of metamorphism (Rank), constituent plant materials (Type), or degree of
impurity (Grade). Also, the grouping of coals according to percentage of volatile matter,
coal caking properties and coking properties.
Coal Field - The coal deposit or bed, in total, in a given geographic locality.
Coal Gasification - Conversion of coal to gaseous fuel without leaving a combustible
residue.
Coal Grade - A coal classification based on the degree of impurity, (i.e. quantity of
inorganic material or ash left after burning).
Coal Hydrogeneration or Liquefaction - The conversion of coal into liquid hydrocarbons
and related compounds by treating an oily paste of bituminous coal with hydrogen gas at
elevated temperatures and pressures.
Coal Measures - A succession of coal seams in varying thickness and separated by
other sedimentary rocks such as sandstone and/or shale.
Coal Measures - As for coal field.
Coal Rank - A coal classification based on degree of metamorphism.
Coal Seam or Bed - A stratum (layer) of coal.
Coke - A combustible material consisting of the fused coal ash and fixed carbon of
bituminous coal, produced by driving off the coal's volatile matter.
Coking Coal - A bituminous coal containing 80-90% carbon and that is suitable for the
production of coke.
Collier - An underground workman in a coal mine - a coal transporting ship.
Colliery - A coal mine inclusive of surface, plant and underground workings.
Compaction - A decrease in the volume of sediment as a result of compressive stress,
usually resulting from continued deposits above, but also from drying and other causes.
Conglomerate - The rock strata lying beneath a coal measure.
Creep - A crush in which pillars are forced down into the floor, or up into the roof of a
mine.
Crossheading - A narrow opening for ventilation driven through coal or rock separating
two passages.
Cuddy - A weighted tram, to counterbalance a loaded tub and pull up the empty tub.
Cut - A groove excavated in the coal face in preparation for blasting.
Datal - Day wage work, minimum wage.
Deadwork - Work for which the miner is not paid.

Deep - Workings below the level of the pit bottom or main levels extending there from.
Dip - Technically, the angle that any inclined stratum makes with a horizontal line. Often
loosely used to describe the seam dip or to follow the dip.
Downcast - The passage through which air is drawn through the mine.
Draegermen - A mine worker or official, engaged in mine rescue while wearing a selfcontained
breathing apparatus.
Drift - The passage through which air is drawn into the mine.
Drill - Any tool used for boring holes underground.
Drive – To excavate a passage.
Driver - A workman, usually a boy, who drives an underground work horse.
Drum - A revolving cylinder on a stationary hoisting or hauling engine, around which the
hoisting or hauling cable is wound.
Entry - The main entrance and travelling passage of the mine.
Examiner - An official who patrols a mine section to examine the workings for
accumulation of gas and other hazards.
Face - The end wall at the working extremity of any excavation in a mine. The place
where a miner works in excavating coal and rock.
Fan - A machine used to force ventilation through a mine. It may be a blow or suction
fan, located on the surface or underground.
Fault - A displacement of strata in which the coal on one side of the fossil is pushed
above, or below, or aside from the corresponding coal on the other side.
Fire Clay - A geological formation, when found is usually immediately beneath a coal
bed. Its heat resistant and easily processable qualities make it invaluable for use as a
fire brick.
Fire Damp - Methane or any explosive gas underground.
Fissure - A separation of rock or coal across the seam.
Fixed Carbon - The part of carbon remaining when coal is heated in a closed vessel until
the volatile matter is driven off. It is the non-volatile matter minus the ash.
Floor - The bottom of a mine excavation, normally in relation to the coal deposit, it is the
upper surface of the stratum immediately underlying a coal seam.
Gob - The void resulting from excavation of coal and also meaning the area from where
coal has been extracted and the roof has been allowed to fall in.
Head - A passage connecting other passages.
Head Frame - The metal frame erected over a shaft, which bears the hoisting wheels
from which the cages are suspended.
High-Volatile Coals - Coals containing over 32 percent volatile matter.
High-Volatile "A" Bituminous Coal - A non-binding bituminous coal with less than 69%
fixed carbon, more than 31% volatile matter and 14,000 or more B.T.U.

High-Volatile "B" Bituminous Coal - A non-binding bituminous coal having between
13,000 and 14,000 B.T.U.
High-Volatile "C" Bituminous Coal - A binding or non-weathering coal having between
11,000 and 13,000 B.T.U.
Hoist - An engine with a winding drum and rope which hauls or hoists a trip or cage.
Hydrocarbons - A large class of organic compounds containing only carbon and
hydrogen, and occurring in coal, petroleum and natural gas.
Inbye - A term relative to position, meaning nearer to the coal face, and opposite to the
term outbye. Sometimes it is used on the surface to mean that an individual is in the
mine.
Induration - The process of hardening of sediments through cementation, pressure, heat,
or other cause.
Intake - A level carrying air to the coal face. The intake for one coal face may be the
return for another.

Lamp - The apparatus carried by all personnel underground to give light.
Lamp Cabin - The place where mine lamps are stored, repaired, charged with electricity
or oil and issued to personnel before going underground.
Level - An excavation or passageway driven in the coal, establishing a base from which
other workings begin. A colliery level does not mean a passageway excavated on a
horizontal plane. A level is generally excavated in one or more slight inclines.
Lift - All the workings driven upwards from one level in a steep pitching seam.
Lignite - A brownish black coal that is intermediate between peat and sub-bituminous
coal.
Loader - A miner's assistant who loads coal into boxes and generally assists the miner
at the face.
Long Wall - A mining operation at a long coal face between parallel passages, the face
being from 50 to 100+ feet, from which the coal is blasted, then loaded by hand onto
mechanically shaken pans which move the coal to the pit boxes.
Low-Volatile Bituminous Coal - A non-binding bituminous coal with 78% to 86% fixed
carbon and 14% to 22% volatile matter.
Manhole - A cubby hole inset in the side of a haulage passage such as the main slope
or level, for personnel to stand in safety when coal boxes pass.
Manway - A passage in or into the mine used as a foot path.
Manager - The official in charge of a mine, surface and underground.
Medium-Volatile Bituminous Coal - A non-binding bituminous coal with 69-78% fixed
carbon and 22-31% volatile matter.
Meta-Anthracite Coal - A non-binding anthracite coal that has 98% or more fixed carbon,
and 2% or less volatile matter.
Metamorphism - The mineralogical and structural adjustment of solid rocks to physical
and chemical conditions that have been imposed at depth below surface.
Miner - Technically a workman engaged in extracting coal at the coal face, but generally
used to describe anyone who works underground.
Mouth - The opening at the surface of any passage into a mine.
Opening - Any excavation in or into a mine.
Operator - The person, company, corporation working a mine, or the individual at the
controls of a machine.
Outcrop - That part of a geographical stratum that appears at the surface.
Outbye - A word relative to position, meaning farther from the coal face, opposite to
inbye. It is loosely used at times by miners to signify the surface.
Overman - An underground official ranking below underground manager, in charge of a
mine section, or, in some circumstances, in charge of a whole mine during the
overmen's shift.
Parting - The layer of slate or stony coal that separates two benches of a coal seam.
Pavement - The bottom of the floor of any excavation.
Peat - An unconsolidated deposit of semi-carbonized plant remains of a water-saturated
environment, such as a bog, and of persistently high moisture content (at least 75%). It
is considered the early stage or rank in the development of coal.
Peat Coal - A coal transitional between peat and brown coal or lignite.
Piece Can - The underground workman's lunch container, usually made from sheet
metal, with a tea can made from the same material.
Pillar - A column or body of coal left unmined to support the roof.
Pillard and Bord - The name used to describe a mining method (i.e. coal is extracted
from the bords and left in the pillars). The latter's extraction is the final mining process.
Pit - A mine.
Plane - An incline on which a track is laid on which to lower or hoist coal.
Powder - Explosive chemical in powder form used at the coal face to blast.
Prop - A wooden upright post to support the roof.
Proximate Analysis - Determines percentages of moisture (water), volatile matter, fixed
carbon and coal ash; also sulphur and heat value in B.T.U. are reported.
Pumpman - A workman who maintains and supervises a pump's operation.
Pump Way - The compartment of a shaft or slope down which pump rods and pipes
extend; also called pump slope and pump shaft.
Punchers - Air-driven percussive pick machines.
Rake - Carries the men into and out of the mine.
Rib - The side of an excavation.
Roadway - See level.
Rob - To mine coal from pillars.
Rollerman - A workman who lubricates and maintains the rollers and pulleys over and
through which haulage cables pass.
Roof - Strata immediately over a coal seam; rock or coal over head in any excavation.
Room and Pillar - A system of mining in which the distinguishing feature is the winning of
fifty percent or more coal in the first working. The coal is mined in rooms separated by
narrow ribs or pillars. The coal in the pillars may be won by subsequent workings. The
rooms are driven parallel with one another, and the room faces may be extended, at
right angles or at an angle to the dip. This method is applicable to flat deposits, such as
coal, that occur in bedded deposits.
Sapropelic Coal - A coal derived from organic residues (finely divided plant material,
spores, algae) in stagnant or standing bodies of water.
Seam - A strata of coal, also called a vein.
Sediment - Solid material, both mineral and organic, that has come to rest on the earth's
surface either above or below sea level.
Semi-Anthracite - Coal intermediate between anthracite and semi-bituminous coal and
having a fixed carbon content of between 85 percent and 92 percent. Physical properties
resemble anthracite.
Semi-Bituminous Coal - Coal that ranks between bituminous and semi-anthracite. It is
harder and more brittle than bituminous coal, has a high fuel ratio and burns without
smoke.
Shaft - A vertical excavation connecting surface and mine workings.
Shaftman - A workman who patrols in a slowly moving cage in a mine shaft, and
maintains the shaft by working through the cage side, or on its top, or suspended from
the cage bottom.
Shift - The time during which workmen work, alternating with some other period.
Shooting - Blasting in a mine.

Shot - The explosive charge in the coal face.
Shotfirer - The official prior to detonating an explosive charge to blast coal, examines the
area for gas, examines the preparations made for the blasting and when assured that all
safety regulations have been complied with, detonates the shot.
Sinking - A passage driven on an incline down to coal workings in lower depths,
comparable to an inside slope.
Slope - An entrance to a mine driven down through an inclined coal seam. An inside
slope in a mine is a passage in the mine driven from one system of workings down
through a seam, to bring up coal from a lower system of workings.
Slopeman - A workman who patrols and keeps in repair the mine's main and back
slopes.
Splint - A hard variety of bituminous coal that ignites with difficulty, owing to its slatey
structure, but makes a clear hot fire.
Spores - Parts of the reproductive organs of many plants that formed coal.
Stableman - A workman who cares for the horses and maintains the stable underground.
In off-working days the stableman is responsible for watering the horses.
Store Keeper - A semi-clerical worker who supervises a storeroom of colliery tools and
equipment, and who issues these items for use upon instruction of competent authority.
Stripping - Mining coal by first removing the covering strata down to the coal bed; open
workings as in a quarry; sometimes used to describe a final mining operation drawing
pillars. When all coal is removed the roof crashes down.
Sub-Bituminous Coal - A black coal that ranks between lignite and bituminous coals. It
has higher carbon and lower moisture content than lignite.
Sub-Bituminous "A" Coal - A non-binding sub-bituminous coal having between 11,000
and 13,000 B.T.U.
Sub-Bituminous "B" Coal - A non-binding sub-bituminous coal having between 9,500
and 11,000 B.T.U.
Sub-Bituminous "C" Coal - A non-binding sub-bituminous coal having between 8,300
and 9,500 B.T.U.
Sulphur - Coal constituent usually in the form of pyrite.
Sump - A basin or collection place in a mine, into which water runs to be pumped out.
Trackman - A workman who keeps mine tracks in repair.
Trapper - Trapper boy, a boy stationed at an underground door, to open and close it
when boxes pass, and thus control the air current.
Travelling Way - A passageway for men and horses in and out of the mine.
Trip - A number of boxes drawn by power, as for rake.
Tunnel - The passageway between two mines or systems of working, driven horizontally
across the measures.
Ultimate Analysis - Determines percentages of chemical elements - carbon, hydrogen,
oxygen, nitrogen and sulphur.
Upcast - The passage from and in a mine through which air passes.
Volatile Matter - Those substances in coal, other than moisture, that are given off as gas
and vapour during combustion.
Workings - An excavation of a mine, as a whole, or that part of a mine in which mining
operations are being done.

http://miningquiz.com/pdf/Glossaries/Glossary_of_Mining_Terms.pdf

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