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Ch. 8: Opening the Craters

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OPENING THE CRATERS                       221
through the period of the open mine working, to show the dif­ferent methods employed, and how one mine profited by the costly experience of another. The superior richness of the diamond-bearing ground in Kimberley mine urged forward its opening more rapidly than the development of the others, and this may properly be outlined first. The plan of min­ing, with the reservation of roadways determined by the Free State inspectors, proved a poor makeshift at best, before the sinking of claims had progressed many feet below the sur-
face. The bordering-claim owners undercut the roadways cross­ing the mine, in working to the bounds of their allotments, and these reserved roads soon began to cave away in places to an extent that made the passage of carts very risky. It was doubtless convenient to have ready access to every part of the surface of the mine, and it was a moving spectacle when four­teen parallel roadways were covered with files of plunging mules and rumbling carts, goaded by the cries and whips of many hun­dreds of half-naked Kafirs or white drivers ; but it was a piti­ful burlesque of mining when the roadways cracked and crumbled, and crevasses were bridged with sliding planks, and mule carts
Ch. 8: Opening the Craters Page of 449 Ch. 8: Opening the Craters
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