Within recent years throughout many industrial countries, the escalation in the numbers and scales of quarrying activity has led the authorities to define the nature and characteristics of a quarry. Four (4) definitions have emerged from this exercise. Van Shalkwyk, 1981, viewed historically three (3) definitions over a forty (40) year period, as follows :
- Ricketts (1943), defined a quarry as
“…… open pit, mine or excavation, where stone, sand and gravel or minerals are obtained.”
- Webster (1961), concluded that a quarry was
“… a stone mine and is distinguished from other types of mines by the fact
that usually it is open at the top and front…”
- Nichols (1962), reviewing the engineering aspects of quarrying noted that
“… it is an opencast mine in rock, chosen for physical rather than
chemical characteristics …”
Van Shalkwyk (1981), simply quoted a quarry as being - “… a source of hard rock which has to be removed by blasting …”
The Mines and Quarries Act of the U.K. (1954) – Section 180 quotes that:- “… a quarry is an excavation or system of excavations made for the purpose of,
or in connection with, the getting of minerals, or products of minerals….”
The Minerals Act No. 61 of 2000 of Trinidad & Tobago does not give a definition of a quarry, and interprets that “… mining means excavating or quarrying…”.
However a mine is described as “…includes any place, excavation or working in, on which operations connected with mining is carried on, together with all buildings, premises, erection and appliances belonging or appertaining thereto, above or below ground, for the purpose of winning, treating or preparing minerals, obtaining or extracting any mineral or metal by any mode or method…” |