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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
II. 3 Hr. PR: MINE 205. Engineering principles, purposes, methods, and equipment applied to the underground environmental control including ventilation, illumination, and dust and noise control.
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3.00 Credits
II. 3 Hr. PR: MINE 205 and MINE 206. The nature of the federal and state laws pertaining to coal mine health and safety; emphasis will be placed on achieving compliance through effective mine planning, design, and mine health and safety management.
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3.00 Credits
I. 3 Hr. PR: Junior standing or Consent. Problems of industrial safety and accident prevention, laws pertaining to industrial safety and health, compensation plans and laws, and industrial property protection.
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3.00 Credits
I. 3 Hr. PR: Senior standing. Methods used to value mineral properties; factors affecting value of mineral properties.
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3.00 Credits
I. 3 Hr. PR: ENGR 102 and MATH 156. Problem solving in mineral processing, mineral resources, mining, and petroleum engineering. Emphasis on applications using various computing technologies.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. PR: PHYS 112 and MINE 205 and MINE 206 or consent. Comprehensive study of mine electrical power systems from theory to practice, covering the vital aspects that go into planning and designing a mine power system.
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3.00 Credits
II. 3 Hr. PR: MINE 205. Elements of longwall mining including panel layout and design considerations, strata mechanics, powered supports, coal cutting by shearer or plow, conveyor transportation, and face move.
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4.00 Credits
I. 4 Hr. PR: MINE 205 and MINE 206 and MAE 241 and MAE 243 and GEOL 342. Rock properties and behavior, in-situ stress field, mine layout and geological effects; design of entry, pillar, and bolt systems, convergence and stress measurements, surface subsidence, roof control plan, slope stability, and laboratory sessions.
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3.00 Credits
I. 3 Hr. PR: MAE 243 or Consent. Elastic and plastic properties of rock, Mohr's criteria of failure, elastic theory, stress distributions around underground openings, open pit and underground stability, rock testing techniques.
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4.00 Credits
4 Hr. PR: MATH 156. Coal formation, petrography, and characteristics; principles of coal beneficiation, washability analysis and coking; colloid characteristics and flotation, unit operations of cocentration, flotation, agglomentation, dewatering, and tailings disposals.
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