The latest geological investigation
on last summer’s Crandall Canyon mine collapse concluded that the starting
point of what seismometers recorded as magnitude-3.9 earthquake was in fact the
place where miners were excavating coal, University of Utah specialists said.
The disaster occurred on August
6, 2007, when six miners and, 10 days later, three rescuers, were killed. The collapse
area covered 50 acres, lasted for only a few seconds, and is most likely to
have killed the miners inside instantly. The three rescuers died in a rescue
attempt 10 days later in a subsequent collapse.
The 53-page report, which has
already been sent to the journal Seismological Research Letters and to federal
Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), concluded that the mine collapse
was not triggered by a seismic event, but was in fact the source that triggered what seismometers recorded
as a seismic event.
The size of the area collapsed
measured 920 meters (3,081 feet) from east to west, and 220 meters (722 feet)
from north to south. Considering the space between the mine’s roof and tunnel
measured only 1 foot, the rubble filling the collapse area prevented further
collapse.
For the families of the miners,
who believe the victims may have struggled to get out of the mine after the
collapse, investigators said they stood no chance, and that they suffered a
quick death, rather than spending agonizing minutes trying to escape.
According to seismological
calculations, the epicenter of the magnitude-3.9 collapse was “within the mine
boundary,” in the place where the miners were excavating. This goes against
mine owner Bon Murray’s claims that an earthquake triggered the collapse.
By combining data from five
seismometers, investigators concluded that the second collapse, which killed
the three rescuers and injured six others on August 16, was also centered near
the mine.
Seismologist Walter Arabasz,
director of the University of Utah Seismograph Stations explained that the
miscalculation of the preliminary epicenter soon after the collapse led to the
assumption that there had been in fact two separated events, a seismic one and
the mine collapse.
This was due to the fact that
the nearest seismic station was 12 miles away, and the initial calculations
placed the epicenter of the event 0.4 miles outside the boundaries of the mine,
and 0.6 miles west-southwest of the real epicenter.
Seismologists concluded that
there can be no doubt on the magnitude-3.9 event: it was not an earthquake, but
the mine collapse that triggered it. The study was funded by the State of Utah
and the U.S. Geological Survey.
Utah seismologists, together
with seismologists from the University of California, Berkeley and Lawrence
Livermore National laboratory, said that the vertical movement recorded during
the collapse excludes the idea of an earthquake (which is triggered by shear
motion along a fault).
By overlapping the patterns of
the mine collapse and a natural earthquake, the seismic waves are very
different, indicating that 20 percent of the energy released during the
collapse came from vertical shearing motion, which excludes the possibility of
an earthquake.
Furthermore, the seismic records
indicate that the vertical shearing motion started prior to the collapse. “It
cannot be interpreted as an earthquake that triggered the collapse,”
seismologist Jim Pechmann, research associate professor of geology and
geophysics at the University of Utah Seismograph Stations said.
Utah’s coal mining region is
well-known for the large number of seismic events that have occurred in the
past three decades (over 17,000), only 2 percent of which were natural
earthquakes.
The complete seismological
report on the August 6, 2007 Crandall Canyon mine collapse is available at http://www.seis.utah.edu/.