GUIDELINES FOR
OPEN PIT SLOPE DESIGN
EDITORS: JOHN
#
CSIRO
PUBLISHING
READ, PETER STACEY
&
J
Contents
Preface
1
and
xiii
acknowledgments
Fundamentals of
slope design
Peter Stacey
1.1
Introduction
1.2
Pit
1
1
slope designs
Safety/social
factors
1.2.1
1.3
1.2.2
Economic factors
1.2.3
Environmental and
1.3.3
Rockfall
Formulation of
slope designs
1.4.1
Introduction
1.4.2
Geotechnical model
1.4.3
Data
uncertainty (Chapter 8)
Acceptance criteria (Chapter 9)
Slope design methods (Chapter 10)
Design implementation (Chapter 11)
1.4.7
1.4.8
1.4.9
4
4
1.4.6
1.7
1.3.2
1.4.5
1.6
regulatory factors
Slope configurations
Instability
1.4.4
1.5
Terminology of slope design
1.3.1
1.4
Slope evaluation and monitoring (Chapter 12)
Risk management (Chapter 13)
Closure (Chapter 14)
Design requirements by project
1.5.1
Project development
1.5.2
Study requirements
level
Review
8
9
10
10
11
11
11
11
12
12
1.6.1
Overview
12
1.6.2
Review levels
14
1.6.3
Geotechnically competent
person
Conclusion
14
14
Field data collection
15
John Read, Jarek Jakubec and GeoffBeale
2.1
Introduction
2.2
Outcrop mapping
logging
15
Introduction
15
2.2.2
General
17
2.2.4
2.4
and
2.2.1
2.2.3
2.3
15
geotechnical logging
Mapping for structural analyses
Surface geophysical techniques
Overburden soils
logging
19
22
23
2.3.1
Classification
23
2.3.2
Strength and relative density
26
Core
drilling
and
logging
26
vi
Guidelines for Open Pit Slope Design
Introduction
2.4.2
Planning
2.4.3
Drill hole location and collar surveying
27
2.4.4
Core barrels
27
2.4.5
Downhole surveying
27
2.4.6
Core orientation
28
2.4.7
Core
2.4.8
Core
sampling,
2.4.9
Core
logging
2.4.10
2.5
26
2.4.1
and
26
scoping
Downhole
storage and
32
39
geophysical techniques
40
Groundwater data collection
groundwater
Approach
2.5.2
Tests conducted
2.5.3
Piezometer installation
2.5.4
Guidance notes: installation of test wells for
to
during
RC
Data
42
drilling
Hydraulic
Setting up pilot depressurisation trials
tests
2.5.6
40
data collection
2.5.1
2.5.5
44
pit slope
47
49
51
52
management
52
Endnotes
31
preservation
depressurisation
2.6
29
handling and documentation
Geological
model
53
John Read and Luke Keeney
3.1
Introduction
53
3.2
Physical setting
53
3.3
Ore
environments
55
3.3.2
3.3.3
Porphyry deposits
Epithermal deposits
56
3.3.4
Kimberlites
56
3.3.5
VMS
57
3.3.7
deposits
Skarn deposits
Stratabound deposits
3.4
Geotechnical
3.5
Regional seismicity
3.6
55
Introduction
3.3.6
body
3.3.1
requirements
57
57
59
62
3.5.1
Distribution of
3.5.2
Seismic risk data
Regional
55
earthquakes
stress
Structural model
62
65
66
69
John Read
4.1
Introduction
69
4.2
Model
4.3
components
Major structures
69
4.2.1
4.2.2
Fabric
75
69
Geological environments
76
4.3.1
Introduction
76
4.3.2
Intrusive
76
Contents
4.3.3
Sedimentary
Metamorphic
4.3.4
4.4
Structural
4.4.2
modelling tools
modelling
Stereographic projection
4.4.3
Discrete fracture network
4.5
77
77
modelling
79
Structural domain definition
General
4.5.2
Example application
Rock
4.5.1
80
guidelines
80
80
model
mass
Antonio Karzulovic and
83
John Read
5.1
Introduction
83
5.2
Intact rock
83
5.3
5.4
5.5
77
Solid
4.4.1
76
77
strength
5.2.1
Introduction
83
5.2.2
Index properties
85
5.2.3
Mechanical
88
5.2.4
Special conditions
Strength
properties
92
of structural defects
5.3.1
Terminology
5.3.2
Defect
94
and classification
94
strength
94
Rock mass classification
117
5.4.1
Introduction
117
5.4.2
RMR, Bieniawski
117
5.4.3
Laubscher IRMR and MRMR
119
5.4.4
Hoek-Brown GSI
123
Rock
mass
strength
127
5.5.1
Introduction
127
5.5.2
Laubscher
127
5.5.3
strength criteria
Hoek-Brown strength criterion
5.5.4
CNI criterion
130
5.5.5
Directional rock
5.5.6
Synthetic rock mass
Hydrogeological
mass
128
strength
132
model
138
model
141
Geoff Beak
6.1
Hydrogeology
slope engineering
Introduction
6.1.2
Porosity
6.1.3
General mine
6.1.4
Making the
Developing a slope depressurisation program
6.1.5
6.2
and
6.1.1
141
and pore pressure
141
dewatering and localised pore pressure
decision to depressurise
Background
to
141
groundwater hydraulics
control
146
148
151
151
6.2.1
Groundwater flow
151
6.2.2
Porous-medium (intergranular) groundwater settings
Fracture-flow groundwater settings
154
6.2.3
6.2.4
Influences
6.2.5
Mechanisms
fracturing
controlling
on
and
groundwater
pore pressure reduction
156
161
163
vii
viii
Guidelines for Open
Pit
Slope Design
6.3
6.4
6.5
Developing a conceptual hydrogeological model of pit slopes
6.3.1
Integrating the pit slope model into the regional model
6.3.2
Conceptual mine scale hydrogeological model
Detailed hydrogeological model of pit slopes
6.3.3
Numerical
Introduction
6.4.2
Numerical
6.4.3
6.4.4
applications
Pit slope scale numerical modelling
Numerical modelling for pit slope pore
6.4.5
Coupling pore pressure and geotechnical
167
dewatering
169
173
pressures
175
models
179
180
slope depressurisation program
6.5.2
Specific programs for control of
180
dewatering
181
192
6.5.4
pit slope pressures
Selecting a slope depressurisation method
Use of blasting to open up drainage pathways
6.5.5
Water
and control
192
management
192
195
Areas for future research
195
6.6.1
Introduction
6.6.2
Relative pore pressure behaviour between
order fractures
6.6.4
6.6.5
high-order
and low195
the interaction between pore pressure and
Standardising
geotechnical models
Investigation of transient pore pressures
Coupled pore pressure and geotechnical modelling
John
196
197
197
201
Geotechnical model
Alan Guest and
Read
7.1
Introduction
201
7.2
Constructing the geotechnical model
201
Required output
Model development
Building the model
Block modelling approach
201
7.2.1
7.2.2
7.2.3
7.2.4
7.3
models for mine scale
General mine
6.6.3
hydrogeological
6.5.1
6.5.3
6.6
166
168
6.4.1
166
168
hydrogeological models
Implementing
166
Applying
the
geotechnical
202
205
206
model
7.3.1
Scale effects
7.3.2
7.3.3
Classification systems
Hoek-Brown rock mass
7.3.4
Pore pressure considerations
Data
202
206
210
strength
criterion
210
211
213
uncertainty
John Read
213
8.1
Introduction
8.2
Causes of data
uncertainty
213
8.3
Impact of data uncertainty
213
8.4
Quantifying data uncertainty
215
8.4.1
Overview
8.4.2
Subjective
215
assessment
215
Contents
8.4.3
8.5
8.5.2
Summary and conclusions
Wesseloo and
Introduction
9.2
Factor of
Tolerable factors of safety
criterion
of failure
design criterion
Acceptable levels of PoF
as a
10.1
224
225
Cost-benefit
9.4.3
Risk model process
228
9.4.4
Formulating acceptance criteria
Slope angles and levels of confidence
232
analysis
Summary
Lorig,
Peter
226
234
235
237
Stacey and John Read
Introduction
237
Design steps
Design analyses
Kinematic
analyses
237
238
239
10.2.1
Benches
239
10.2.2
Inter-ramp slopes
244
Rock
mass
analyses
246
10.3.1
Overview
246
10.3.2
246
10.3.3
Empirical methods
Limit equilibrium methods
10.3.4
Numerical methods
253
10.3.5
Summary recommendations
263
Peter Williams,
11.2
223
9.4.2
Design implementation
11.1
223
225
10.1.2
10.3
223
Introduction
10.1.1
10.2
221
9.4.1
Slope design methods
Loren
219
Risk model
9.4.5
9.5
219
221
9.2.2
9.3.2
9.4
safety
as a design
PoF
216
221
FoS
9.3.1
216
221
9.2.1
Probability
216
John Read
9.1
9.3
11
Geotechnical reporting system
Assessment criteria checklist
Acceptance criteria
]ohan
10
frequency concepts
Reporting data uncertainty
8.5.1
8.6
Relative
John Floyd,
248
265
Gideon Chitombo and Trevor Maton
Introduction
265
Mine
265
planning aspects of slope design
11.2.1
Introduction
265
11.2.2
Open pit design philosophy
Open pit design process
Application of slope design criteria in mine design
Summary and conclusions
265
11.2.3
11.2.4
11.2.5
267
268
276
Guidelines for Open Pit Slope Design
11.3
Controlled
276
11.3.2
Design terminology
Blast damage mechanisms
Influence of geology on blast-induced damage
Controlled blasting techniques
Delay configuration
Design implementation
Performance monitoring and analysis
Design refinement
Design platform
Planning and optimisation cycle
277
11.3.4
11.3.5
11.3.6
11.3.7
11.3.8
11.3.9
11.3.10
11.3.11
Excavation and
Risk
299
305
306
310
Artificial support
Basic approaches
313
313
313
11.5.2
Stabilisation, repair and support methods
314
11.5.3
Design considerations
315
11.5.4
Economic considerations
316
11.5.5
Safety considerations
Specific situations
317
11.5.7
Reinforcement
318
11.5.8
Rockfall protection
Hawley,
317
measures
Scott Marisett,
325
measures
monitoring
327
Geoff Beale and Peter Stacey
Assessing slope performance
327
12.1.1
Introduction
327
12.1.2
Geotechnical model validation and refinement
327
12.1.3
Bench
329
12.1.6
13
296
312
12.1.5
12.3
294
Scaling and bench cleanup
Evaluation of bench design achievement
12.1.4
12.2
292
310
scaling
Performance assessment and
12.1
282
11.4.2
11.5.6
Mark
279
Excavation
11.5.1
12
278
11.4.1
11.4.3
11.5
276
Introduction
11.3.3
11.4
blasting
11.3.1
performance
Inter-ramp slope performance
Overall slope performance
Summary and conclusions
337
339
342
Slope monitoring
342
12.2.1
Introduction
12.2.2
Movement
monitoring systems
12.2.3
Guidelines
on
Ground control
342
the execution of
343
monitoring programs
management plans
12.3.1
Introduction
12.3.2
Hazard management
363
370
370
plan
371
management
381
Ted Brown and Alison Booth
13.1
Introduction
13.1.1
381
13.1.2
Background
Purpose and
13.1.3
Sources of information
381
content of this
chapter
381
382
Contents
13.2
Overview of risk management
Definitions
13.2.2
General risk management process
383
13.2.3
Risk management in the minerals industry
384
383
Geotechnical risk management for open
13.3
13.4
Risk assessment
13.5
14
383
13.2.1
pit slopes
methodologies
385
389
13.4.1
Approaches
to risk assessment
13.4.2
Risk identification
389
13.4.3
Risk analysis
391
13.4.4
Risk evaluation
395
389
Risk
mitigation
396
13.5.1
Overview
396
13.5.2
Hierarchy of controls
13.5.3
Geotechnical control
13.5.4
Mitigation plans
13.5.5
Monitoring,
398
measures
398
399
review and feedback
Open pit closure
400
401
Dirk van Zyl
Introduction
14.1
14.2
Mine closure
14.3
401
planning for
open
pits
Introduction
14.2.2
Closure planning for new mines
403
14.2.3
Closure
403
14.2.4
Risk assessment and
403
planning
for
existing
mines
management
Open pit closure planning
Closure goals and criteria
405
405
14.3.1
405
14.3.2
Site characterisation
14.3.3
Ore
14.3.4
Surface water diversion
409
14.3.5
Pit water balance
409
14.3.6
Pit lake
409
14.3.7
14.3.8
14.3.9
14.3.10
14.4
403
14.2.1
body
characteristics and
water
407
mining approach
quality
risk
408
Ecological
Pit wall stability
410
Pit
412
assessment
410
access
Reality of open pit
closure
412
Open pit closure activities and post-closure monitoring
412
14.4.1
Closure activities
412
14.4.2
Post-closure
412
14.5
monitoring
Conclusions
412
Endnotes
Appendix
413
415
Groundwater data collection
Appendix
Essential statistical and
431
probability theory
xi
xii
Guidelines for Open Pit Slope Design
Appendix
437
Influence of in situ stresses
Evert Hoek, Jean
Appendix
Risk
on
open
447
management: geotechnical
Appendix
pit design
Hutchinson, Kathy Kalenchuk and Mark Diederichs
hazard checklists
459
Example regulations
Terminology
and
for open
definitions
pit closure
462
References
467
Index
487