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Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2
Tytuł:
Górnicze metody zabezpieczania wyrobisk kopalń Wieliczki i Bochni przed zagrożeniem zawałowym
Mining methods of protecting the excavations of Wieliczka and Bochnia mines against the cave-in hazard
Autorzy:
Charkot, Józef
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2055007.pdf
Data publikacji:
2021-12-10
Wydawca:
Muzeum Żup Krakowskich Wieliczka
Tematy:
kopalnia
szyb
chodnik
komora
zabezpieczanie
obudowa
kaszt
podsadzka
a mine
a shaft
a gallery
a chamber
securing
timbering
a box-crib
filling material
Opis:
Eksploatacja soli w kopalniach Wieliczki i Bochni wymagała systematycznego prowadzenia prac zabezpieczających. Na przestrzeni wieków zmieniano lub modyfikowano metody ich realizacji. W artykule przedstawiono sposoby zabezpieczania poszczególnych rodzajów wyrobisk: szybów, szybików, chodników i komór. Szyby od XIII do XIX w. miały z reguły obudowę drewnianą i prostokątny przekrój. Od początku XX w. nowo zgłębiane szyby otrzymywały obudowę murowaną. Wymieniano również obudowy drewniane na murowane. Szybiki na odcinkach przechodzących przez pokłady i bryły soli oraz zwięzłe skały płonne pozostawiano bez obudowy, inne zabezpieczano obudową drewnianą. Chodniki w bardzo dobrych warunkach geologicznych nie wymagały zabezpieczeń, jednak w zdecydowanej większości posiadają różnorodne odmiany obudowy drewnianej. Pierwotnym, powszechnie stosowanym sposobem zabezpieczania komór było pozostawianie solnej łuski ochronnej. W rozległych komorach już od XIV w. stawiano filary solne. Od tego stulecia budowano również kaszty. Od początku działalności górniczej jednym ze sposobów ochrony komór przed destrukcją było ich podsadzanie. Do XVIII w. podsadzkę stanowił urobek pozyskiwany podczas prac podziemnych (skały płonne, zanieczyszczona sól). W Wieliczce w XIX w. rozpoczęto jej transport z powierzchni. Początkowo była to ziemia, a od początku XX w. piasek. Systematyczne podsadzanie piaskiem na sucho prowadzono do II wojny światowej, incydentalnie w latach 60. XX w. Od lat 80. tego stulecia prowadzi się podsadzanie hydrauliczne. W ten sposób zabezpieczono zasadniczą część wyrobisk, które nie zostały objęte ochroną konserwatorską.
The exploitation of salt in the Wieliczka and Bochnia mines required systematic protection works. Over centuries, the methods of their implementation have been changed or modified. The article presents methods of securing specific types of mine workings: shafts, pit-holes, galleries and chambers. Between the thirteenth and nineteenth century, shafts generally had a timbering and a rectangular cross-section. It was at the beginning of the 20th century that newly sunk shafts started to receive a brick lining. Timbering was also replaced with brick lining. Within sections passing through the deposits and blocks of salt as well as compact waste rocks, pit-holes were left without timbering, while others were secured with it. In very good geological conditions, galleries did not require any protection, however, the vast majority of them have various types of timbering. The original, commonly used method of securing chambers was to leave salt protective slices. Salt pillars had already been erected in large chambers since the 14th century. It is also then that the first box-cribs were built. From the beginning of mining activity, one of the methods of protecting the chambers from destruction was to backfill them. Until the 18th century, the filling material consisted of the output obtained in the course of underground works (waste rocks, contaminated salt). In Wieliczka its transport from the surface started in the 19th century. Initially, it was earth, and from the beginning of the 20th century – sand. Systematic dry backfilling had been carried out until World War II, and incidentally in the 1960’s. Hydraulic backfilling has been carried out since the 1980’s. That is how the essential part of the excavations, which were not under conservation protection, was secured.
Źródło:
Studia i Materiały do Dziejów Żup Solnych w Polsce; 2021, XXXV, 1; 128-199
0137-530X
Pojawia się w:
Studia i Materiały do Dziejów Żup Solnych w Polsce
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Uwarunkowania historyczne i prawno–organizacyjne górniczo–konserwatorskiego zabezpieczania zabytkowych wyrobisk Kopalni Bocheńskiej
Historical, legal and organisational determinants of mining and conservation protection of historical pits in the Bochnia Salt Mine
Autorzy:
Charkot, Józef
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/487332.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016
Wydawca:
Muzeum Żup Krakowskich Wieliczka
Tematy:
uwarunkowania historyczne
organizacja
zabezpieczania
zabytkowe
wyrobiska
kopalnia
Bochnia
Historical legal
mine
conservation
protection
historical pits
Salt Mine
Opis:
The objective of this article is to present hitherto accomplishments in the area of protection of the mine understood as a monument in a legal sense. They are presented in reference to securing activities in the mine, effected throughout the history of its functioning. These issues have not been presented in a  synthetic manner so far. The basic source material for the study was information accumulated in the course of documentation work conducted by the employees of the Cracow Saltworks Museum Wieliczka (in cooperation with engineers and technical employees from the Bochnia Salt Mine) underground. The manner of presentation of issues discussed in the study derives from an analogous article pertaining to the Wieliczka Salt Mine, presented in volume XXIII of this yearbook. The necessity of securing the mining pits in the Bochnia Salt Mine has been apparent since the very beginning of its commercial operation. Various solutions were applied, frequently quite untypical, adjusted to the specific geological structure of the deposit. The basic material was wood, used to line the rising headings, as well as drifts in the weak rock mass. Extensive chambers were propped up with support columns, usually filled with mining spoil and contaminated salt types. The specific nature of the Bochnia Salt Mine was that the support columns were constructed of thin alder and birch trunks. Support columns made of thick pine, spruce or fir wood were rarely used. Some of the selected areas were liquidated by being completely filled with waste rocks and post-production waste. Smaller of them, left without any means of protection, were completely clamped after several centuries. The original form of securing the chambers from the progressing destruction was leaving them at the edge of a thin salt shell. Until the 18th century, transport routes were designated in some of them via lining or support columns, which connected exploitation areas located on various depths. Conservation work in the legal sense began only after inclusion of the mine in the list of monuments in 1981, even though some of the projects undertaken earlier had this objective in mind, especially in the underground chapels. Mining and conservation work is performed in a zone included under protection, i.e. on levels from I to IX, in most valuable mining pits, selected on the basis of substantive criteria with respect to the values of the mining pits. The selection was made by the employees of the Cracow Saltworks Museum Wieliczka on the basis of materials accumulated during the systematic scientific and technical stock-taking conducted in the 1970s and 1980s; the list was approved by the Małopolska Province Monument Conservator in Kraków. It includes 65 chambers, 112 drifts, 3 shafts and 4 fore-shafts. Furthermore, the most valuable regions of the mine with respect to natural assets were encompassed by a detailed stocktaking in 2005 and subjected to additional legal protection on the basis of the Nature Conservation Act in the form of 27 documentation sites. The conservation authorities have also formulated guidelines pertaining to the procedure of preparing and performing work in the historical pits. The starting point is preparation of a historical and conservation study and subsequently a technical design relying on its recommendations. On this basis, permits are issued for the conduct of work in protected shafts, chambers and drifts. Direct supervision over the performance of work until 1999 was the obligation of the Province Monument Conservator in Tarnów, and later the Małopolska Province Monument Conservator in Kraków and, since 2016, the Cracow Saltworks Museum Wieliczka. The basic source of financing for the conservation projects are funds deriving from the state budget, which may be formally assigned for such a purpose since 2000. Earlier (since 1991) they were fully assigned to liquidation work. As of 2000, funds assigned for specific projects from the National Environmental Protection and Water Management Fund constitute a significant supplement for the financing. Relatively small funds are also generated by the tourist and spa activities pursued since 1995. The majority of mining and conservation work was performed by the mining team of the Bochnia Salt Mine. Tasks calling for specialist equipment and special qualifications of employees were commissioned from external companies. The basic part of the work was concentrated on levels from I to IV, in mining pits that are the most valuable with respect to the presented historical values. The speed of work gained momentum after the mine was classified as the monument of history (2000). Initially, the work focused on securing pits that are assigned for being made available to tourists on level IV, i.e. the August Chamber, and on level VI: the Sienkiewicz Chamber and the Dobosz Inter-level. As a result of them, in 1995 the conditions in the mine allowed for admission of organised groups to the mine for the first time in history. Later, work was conducted in drifts and chambers assigned for thematically oriented exhibitions. In the first period, the greatest mining and conservation projects included securing the central part of the August Drift, along with adjoining corridors and the extensive Ważyn Chamber. Its adjustment to perform recreational and sanatorium-type functions required a lot of effort. In the second stage, work performed in the complex of mining pits called Zejście Kalwaria, spreading from level I Danielowiec to level IV August, was of great importance, as well as work at eleven sections of Regis Stairs connecting these levels. It is also necessary to mention professional conservation of the 18th century Passionis Chamber and opening the 17th century Krucyfiks Chamber for tourists. Performance of mining and conservation work has acquired a special rank and should be an absolute priority after inclusion of the Salt Mine in the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2013.
Źródło:
Studia i Materiały do Dziejów Żup Solnych w Polsce; 2016, 31; 119-150
0137-530X
Pojawia się w:
Studia i Materiały do Dziejów Żup Solnych w Polsce
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2

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