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Mystery Rock!

07 April 2025
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The Strongman Melt

This volcanic looking rock is not volcanic at all! Its essentially mudstone that has been fractured and melted by intense heat from a burning coal mine. Although technically a Te Tai Poutini West Coast rock, weve placed it here in the Waitaha North Canterbury region with the other mudstone concretions, as part of our overall sedimentary rock sequence that the North Canterbury region is dominated by. If you look carefully, you can see the clasts of fired mudstone, linking it in place with the other non-fired mudstone. This rock is part of the Brunner Coal Measures, the famous high-quality coal bearing sedimentary rocks of the West Coast. Here in North Canterbury we have an equivalent sequence represented by the Broken River Coal Measures, with coal to be found in locations such as Castle Hill Basin, Waipara, Malvern Hills and Mt Somers.泭

Although looking like a volcanic rock in the garden, under the microscope, you can see the tiny, rounded quartz grains (grey and blues coloured) that make up the fired mudstone! Kamen Engel, Thor Photography (2025)泭

Historic Blackburn Coal Mine on the Mt Somers Walkway. Kate Pedley (2020).

Strongman mine, a coal mine located north of Greymouth, West Coast, was historically an underground mine (operating since the late 1930s). It gradually transitioned into open pit mining from the early 2000s.

Strongman Mine is located in an extreme environment. The landscape is steep and at a high altitude, with the offices located 600 meters above sea level. Annual rainfall exceeds 6 metres, with snowfall a regular occurrence during the winter months. Haul roads, pit walls, overburden disposal sites, and daily life on the mine are made challenging due to these environmental conditions. Environmental issues such as water management and ground control are important aspects in the pristine environment that surrounds Strongman. Initiatives such as redirecting mine water into underground mine workings have been used to naturally filter suspended sediment, without having to use chemical flocculants. Ground control with regards to rehabilitation of the pits and overburden disposal sites for stability, longevity and overall safety was managed professionally, with regular input from the West Coast Regional Council and Department of Conservation. Historic and more recent mining activities onsite had resulted in coal fires burning in the underground workings. This smouldering underground fire has been burning in the Strongman Mine since 1996. The underground fire raged for over 17 years, despite Solid Energy's best efforts to extinguish it.

GEOTECH Ground Engineering took over the site from 2010 -2015 and was successful in a significant reduction of the fire liabilities as well as removing additional coking coal. These fires were constantly monitored and constrained. The introduction of stowing onsite was used to infill underground workings with saturated crusher dust, and pressure injection of bentonite clay into voids was used to reduce air flow to the fires, essentially limiting their fuel.

Steam rising out of the back of the pictured truck. Because the overburden (mudstone) would be so hot when it got put on the trucks, they would quite literally be steaming down the road.

Overburden and coal on fire at Strongman Mine being loaded into trucks for removal and fire control.

The rocks, key information and photos of the Strongman Mine supplied by GEOTECH Ground Engineering, Charleston, West Coast.

Managing Director - Anthony Black

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