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| (Photo
by Sebastian Thrun, Carnegie Mellon University) |
Researchers from
Carnegie Mellon University have delivered on a pledge to fast-track
a robotic mine mapping tool (ENR 9/16 p. 50). They recently
sent a 1,600-lb robot named 'Groundhog" into a mine closed
since the 1920s and displayed its data collection live to
several hundred observers at a conference on mine mapping
155 miles away.
The 4-wheeled device used laser
scanners to map what it found on a 100-ft trial excursion.
"It was in muck that was over the tires. It wasn't swimming,
but it was digging through some pretty nasty stuff," says
Warren Whittaker, a consultant on the project.
The machine went in alone, collected
data and extracted itself without aid from a standby rescue-tether.
The data was processed live and transmitted to the symposium
in Charleston, W. Va., Oct. 29.
Other technologies attracting particular
attention were advances in seismic wave analysis and the use
of directional, "long hole" horizontal drilling to explore
conditions hundreds, even thousands of feet ahead of human
miners.
Ray McKinney, administrator of
the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration's Coal Division,
says the robotics were "pretty interesting," and the accuracy
of directional drilling technology was surprising. "I keep
getting calls from people wanting more information," he says.
Proceedings should be posted at www.msha.gov
this week.
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