all pb
>Hussein FBI truth
>then
>stoping Nuclear weapons truth
>Q3035
<[MUELLER] connection to U1 & Russia?
>PP
>Whitehouse includes the typo
>P > 16
INterdasting
>In underground mining, a stope and stoping are two distinct components of underground design and operations.
>Stoping is a method of extracting ore from an underground mine that leaves behind an open space called a stope. Stoping is the method and the stope is the physical open space that was dug out into a tunnel or room in the mine.
Yes, "stoping" (likely a typo or misspelling of"stoping") and uranium mining are directly related.
"Stoping" is a standard term in mining engineering. It refers to the process of extracting ore from an underground mine, creating an open space called a stope (the area from which the ore is removed). This is a core technique used in underground mining operations.
Uranium mining often involves underground methods (especially for deeper or higher-grade deposits), where stoping is commonly applied. Examples include:
Blasthole stoping (used at high-grade uranium mines like those operated by Cameco in Canada, e.g., McArthur River).
Cut-and-fill stoping, shrinkage stoping, sublevel stoping, or open stoping — these appear in descriptions of uranium extraction in various deposits worldwide.
Uranium ore bodies are frequently mined using stoping variations because the method suits steeply dipping or irregular ore veins common in hard-rock uranium deposits.
While not all uranium mining uses stoping (e.g., in-situ leaching (ISL/ISR) dominates modern production in places like the US and Kazakhstan, and open-pit mining is used for shallower deposits), stoping remains relevant in many underground uranium mines.
In short: Stoping is one of the key underground extraction techniques employed in uranium mining when conventional drilling, blasting, and ore removal are used.