Into the void: Mapping abandoned mines in 3D [The Citizens’ Voice, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.]
| By Brendan S. Gibbons, The Citizens' Voice, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
He knelt by an uncovered hole in the street, about the diameter of a coffee can, and spooled a yellow, metal-tipped measuring tape into the dark opening. He lowered the tip 23 feet down before a beep let him know it had touched water.
He had found the surface of the pool that formed in the abandoned coal mine beneath the
"Do you think all these people here know there's water 23 feet below their houses?" Hughes said, nodding toward the homes about a hundred feet away. "Doubt it."
Bore hole measurements are some of the data Hughes, 41, is using to create three-dimensional maps of the abandoned mines below the
Last week, the
"If I was going to build a house anywhere in this area, I wouldn't only be concerned about whether or not there has been mining in there, I'd be concerned if there was water beneath your house," Hughes said. "You can get flooded basements; you can get subsidence in those areas where there is a mine pool beneath you. It's just a matter of how deep that mine pool is and how much cover is on the roof of the rock beneath your house."
Subsidence is one of the lingering reminders of the long, often bloody, history of coal mining in
By 1987, the total weight of anthracite pulled from the ground was less than 10 percent of what it was in 1917.
For residents with long ties to the area, subsidences barely raise an eyebrow. As the earth's surface settles into the voids below, hundreds of these events occur every year.
Walko said the number of possible subsidences reported to the DEP fluctuates every year. In years with heavier precipitation, he said, underground water pressure can lead to more subsidences.
The risk of such an event happening to one person is low, said
"They just think that they're not going to be that unlucky person," Ruane said.
Plumbing the depths
Digitizing the thousands of maps will help the board and the general public see what lies beneath their homes or businesses, he said. More complete maps will be especially useful in the anthracite region, which has not been mapped thoroughly.
Ruane envisions the final product being available online, so a resident could type in an address and see a picture of his or her location with an image of the mines underneath.
"A picture is worth a thousand words," he said. He also thinks the digital maps will cut down on the research time needed for claims.
"If we have that information in electronic form, what would take maybe days to research, they may be able to research in minutes," Ruane said.
DEP spokeswoman
"This program basically allows us to share the burden of being able to examine, preserve, digitize, georeference and upload those maps," Witman said.
After the maps are finished, DEP will use them on its new Pennsylvania Mine Map Atlas, Minemaps.psu.edu, which Witman said went online in May. DEP launched the website on
The funding used to create the atlas and issue the grants came from coal mining license and permit fees, fines and penalties gathered under the Pennsylvania Surface Mining and Reclamation Act, Witman said.
"Between their work and the work we have already done, there is still an opportunity out there to do even more for the Mine Map Atlas to make it as comprehensive as possible," Witman said in an email.
'Georeferencing'
At his office in
On his computer, Hughes pulled up a preliminary map he and Hewitt made by combining mining company maps with data from a series of reports from the
EPCAMR also measured the water depth in several of the approximately 40 bore holes all over the
"We would measure the water elevation inside of that bore hole to get at what the elevation of the pool is," Hughes said. "That elevation of the water, we extend it out underneath the ground to the contour of the underground mine workings."
The map they created using these methods is still two-dimensional. To add the vertical axis, Hughes is using cross-section maps of the
He uses a mouse to trace the lines on the cross-sections representing rock, coal and void space. Combining this with the horizontal map yields a digital, 3-D representation of the
When completed, the maps could help property owners decide whether to carry the department's mine subsidence insurance, Witman said. She said the average cost to repair a home with mine subsidence damage is
Ninety-five percent of people living in mine-affected areas do not carry subsidence insurance, Ruane said. But most residents do know about it, according to the board's surveys.
"The vast majority of people in the mining region know about mine subsidence and know about mine subsidence insurance," he said. Most are simply willing to take a risk.
He said one subsidence in the 1990s did
The most recent incident was a few months ago on the corner of Vine and
"If I had a home, I'd like to see it and look at what's under my house," he said.
___
(c)2013 The Citizens' Voice (Wilkes-Barre, Pa.)
Visit The Citizens' Voice (Wilkes-Barre, Pa.) at citizensvoice.com
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