Mining robotics


Autoria(s): Corke, Peter; Roberts, Jonathan M.; Cunningham, Jock; Hainsworth, David
Contribuinte(s)

Siciliano, Bruno

Khatib, Oussama

Data(s)

2008

Resumo

Mining is the process of extracting mineral resources from the Earth for commercial value. It is an ancient human activity which can be traced back to Palaeolithic times (43 000 years ago), where for example the mineral hematite was mined to produce the red pigment ochre. The importance of many mined minerals is reflected in the names of the major milestones in human civilizations: the stone, copper, bronze, and iron ages. Much later coal provided the energy that was critical to the industrial revolution and still underpins modern society, creating 38% of world energy generation today. Ancient mines used human and later animal labor and broke rock using stone tools, heat, and water, and later iron tools. Today’s mines are heavily mechanized with large diesel and electrically powered vehicles, and rock is broken with explosives or rock cutting machines.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/33775/

Publicador

Springer

Relação

http://www.springer.com/engineering/robotics/book/978-3-540-23957-4

Corke, Peter, Roberts, Jonathan M., Cunningham, Jock, & Hainsworth, David (2008) Mining robotics. In Siciliano, Bruno & Khatib, Oussama (Eds.) Springer handbook of robotics. Springer, Berlin, pp. 1127-1150.

Direitos

Copyright 2008 Springer

Fonte

School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science; Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; Institute for Future Environments; Science & Engineering Faculty; School of Engineering Systems

Palavras-Chave #090602 Control Systems Robotics and Automation #091405 Mining Engineering #mining #robotics #machine design #productivity #automation
Tipo

Book Chapter