Ch. 13: Obstacles and Perils

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OBSTACLES AND PERILS
25
in the mines," and in view of this danger and loss of life, the inspector urgently recommended the limitation by the govern­ment of the height and width of the underground workings.
" Main tunnels to be used only for traffic not to exceed 8 feet in width and 8 feet in height.
" Working chambers or stalls from which the blue or dia-mantiferous ground is excavated in bulk, not to exceed 18 feet in width by 20 feet in height to the highest point.
" Partitions or pillars not to be of less thickness than half the width of the contiguous chambers or stalls.
" The roof of ceiling between one level and the next above to be not less than 20 feet in thickness at the highest point of the lower workings."
This recommendation had in view obviously the precautions enforced in the working of coal mines, and would doubtless have afforded an increased measure of protection, but the method of working proposed was not well suited to the develop­ment of the diamond-bearing ground, as was later conclusively determined. The slaking and crumbling of the diamond-bear­ing breccia upon exposure to air and moisture make roof falls and slips from the sides especially frequent and disastrous. The ground is full of soapy seams, and pieces of considerable size drop without a moment's warning, so that it is necessary, in places, to keep the tunnels timbered as near the working face as possible. Risk from this cause cannot be wholly obviated in such mining, but the introduction of the new system adopted for the working of the mines, shortly after they came under my management, has greatly diminished this peril, and the resultant loss of life or injury to the workmen. By the new system the levels are worked back from the surrounding hard rock or reef in sections, formerly 30 feet, now 40 feet apart, as before partic­ularly described, in a series of terraces, extracting the ground from the uppermost level downward in succession. This method did away with any danger of collapse in the under­ground works, and by successively robbing out the roof and sides of the tunnels on each descending terrace, the caving of
Ch. 13: Obstacles and Perils Page of 396 Ch. 13: Obstacles and Perils
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