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Nottingham remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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Cornwall remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Sheffield remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Licences for methane are relatively simple, but worthless without development consent from the local councils or the agreement of the Coal Authority (I'll find out more about that next week).
London remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Check out some of my travel photos remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>The opportunity to attend the Institute of Mine Surveyors of South Africa conference and give a presentation on Mine Surveying Regulation in New South Wales was a great experience. South Africa is facing many of the same issues that Australia is in regard to Mine surveying. The day prior to the conference, many of the larger mining companies take the opportunity to gather their mine surveyors for a group meeting to discuss various issues. The availability of several of the key Institute members made it possible to hold a brief meeting with them in the afternoon along with President of PLATO (South African equivilent of BOSSI) and the President of the International Society for Mine Surveying to discuss issue effecting the Institute and Indusrty in South Africa, sharing with them some expeiences in Australia.
Thursday the conference proper commenced with a good spread of practical, technical and Institute centred presentations. Tertiary education in South Africa is set to change in the very near future which will have a significant impact on Mine Surveyors. Currently there are two avenues to a Certificate of Competency in South Africa. Diploma or degree in Mineral Surveying from a tertiary institution or through completing the Chamber of Mines exams before sitting the Certificate of Competency exam which are similar to our own in New South Wales, with the exception of Minerals valuation. The future will see the structure of the tertiary education framework change and necessitate a review of the mine surveying courses currently offered and perhaps a move to the certificate of competency being an Advanced/graduate diploma? But its early days.
Mine Surveying Conference remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Palabora Mining Company is home to perhaps the largest man made hole in the southern hemisphere, its opencast copper mine. At roughly 2km in diameter, this circular pit is close to 800m deep. Gaining a true appreciation of it's size is hard as there's not much to provide scale. From the photo you can see the shaft head gear in the background which is over 100m high. The benches in the pit are 15m and 30m high which gives some indication also. The photo is taken from the top of one of the mine's spoil dumps that is now a tourist lookout. The pit is no longer being mined as mining relocated underground several years ago to carry on with a block cave operation below the pit. Partially as a result a significant failure of the pit has occured which can be seen in on of the photos. Consequently there is an intense monitoring program of the pit to ensure that any movement is detected and assessed. To do this the mine uses a combination of GNSS recievers, tilt metres, prism monitoring using total station observations to fixed points on structures and trig pillars and photogrametry using a hand held camera and inhouse software will soon be introduced.
The mine borders the Kruger National Park and a trip here is nearly as good as the park, with Elephant, hippo, giraffe, crocodile, lion and many others regularly roaming the site or taking up residency in one of the catchment dams. Baboons are a common pest in the rubbish bins. Safety alerts are regularly circulated advising the location of lions around the mine.
Lions, elephants and baboons, not your typical mining hazard remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>dozens of Elephants, a leopard, a couple of cheetahs, some hippos, but no lion. Oh well can't have it all, but its quite amazing to be only metres from totally wild animals.
Where the wild things are. remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Journey to the centre of the earth remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Mines Rescue training remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Google maps link:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=matla,+south+africa&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=35.494074,60.117188&ie=UTF8&ll=-26.201115,29.083643&spn=0.039276,0.058708&t=h&z=14.
You though you'd seen subsidence remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>One of the production panels utilises a continous coal clearance systems from the miner using a series of loader/conveyors. Surveyors are kept busy setting sights, conducting ribline surveys and completing control surveys as the development rates are pretty good, but they're staffed well, taking up a whole office building. Most mines still use a draftsperson to prepare all their plans and Microstation is a popular package.
Oil from Coal remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>The cable car to the table of cable mountain is quite a feat of engineering and you can't help but look up in hope that the cable doesn't break. The view for the top is breathtaking, yes the view is stunning but the air at 1100m metres is bloody cold and I could see snow about 50km away, but I was grateful that I had great visiability.
The following day I caught a boat out to Robbon Island about 8km out from Cape Town. Robbon Island also has a long and diverse history, having been used as a lepper colony, military base and most notably as a prison use to house political prisoners during the aphartide era, including Nelson Mandela for 18 years. The tour of the prison is carried out by a former prisoner and can be a moving experience as he explains some of his experiences there. Robbon Island also has a quarrying history from the time when the prisoners were made to cut limestone for the road base and other uses on the island. The whole island is now a world heritage site.
Cape Town cultural heritage remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>The inspection involved a conventional chainage and offset ribline survey with additional measurements taken for intersection diagonals and extraction widths. Back in the office this information is plotted along with the calculation of factor of safety and width-height ratio. Provided that these numbers are within tollerance then the inspectors are satisfied. Examination of plans typically highlights areas where the plan does not conform to the standard or reveals an omission.
Coal Mines are coal mines are coal mines...but not always remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Survey methods at the mine include real time monitoring of a nearby road using extensiometers and tilt meters, GPS monitoring of the highwall and fine dam, in addition to the typical control surveys, drivage and grade control. Due to the age of the mine some of the original plans for the area over 100 years old and impressive to see especially the draftsmanship, sadly the one thing that modern drafting lacks.
Back to survey reality here as the team consists of a 3 surveyors and 3 assistants. For a while there I thought every mine had scores of assistants.
Diamonds are.. remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>The Platinium reef (seam) outcrops in the Rustenburg area and dips away to the North at about 15 degrees. Although some mining has occured by open cut methods, the vast majority of Mines in the area are underground. Access to the underground was very different to what I'm used to and is via a chairlift, not unlike a ski lift, down to the production level, then a 500m walk to the production unit. The Mine is very tidy and presents well but what really impressed me was the fact that they employ 8000 people at this mine, eight thousand! I was initially shocked by their safety statistics of 1 fatality, 52 Lost Time Injuries and 32 Serious Injuries, but taking into consideration the size of the workforce and excepting the fatality, thats not too bad and I'm assured that it is on the improve. The method of mining here is by longwall, but not in the same sence as a typical longwall in an Australian coal mine, but rather the face is drilled and blasted then cleared using a scraper. The supports placed are timber props and the "seam" is only 1.0m thick. Bloody hard work on your knees all day I'm sure. All ore haulage takes place using battery powered locos on rails back to the hopper and onto the belt for transport to the surface up the decline.
The survey office at the mine consists of the Mine Surveyor, Assistant Mine Surveyor, 6 surveyors, 21 assistants and one draftsperson. Wow, wouldn't that be nice back home. The methods of surveying are fairly typical and use Leica equipment for control traverses, direction and grade control. Face pickup is fairly conventional using chainage and offset from existing survey stations.
The return trip from the mine took the scenic route back to Pretoria, through an agricultural area and past the weekend retreat areas visited by these from Pretoria and Johannesburg. Roadside stalls are a frequent sight through out South Africa, with most trying to make a living from selling fruit, vegetables, exhaust systems repairs and hubcaps. Tomorrow I'm off to a diamond mine, gold will be next week. Anyone know a good jeweller?
...Go! remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Ready, Set... remains copyright of the author Sarge78, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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