Bulletin 190 COAL-MINING PROBLEMS IN THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 94
- File Size:
- 3436 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1924
Abstract
The United States Geological Survey has estimated 1 that the
State of Washington contains 11,412,000,000 tons of bituminous coal
and 52,442,000,000 tons of subbituminous coal, in beds more than 14
inches thick. As the present rate of production is about 4,000,000
tons a year, Washington apparently contains coal enough to supply
Pacific coast markets for many years.
The character of the coal beds of Washington renders the production
of clean coal very difficult, and a considerable proportion of the
output is washed before it is marketed. In 1915 Washington ranked
fifth among the States in the amount of coal washed, though only
twentieth in total output. In that year 37.9 per cent of the coal produced
in the State was treated in surface cleaning plants.
On account of extensive folding and faulting of the coal measures,
mining in Washington presents many difficulties; therefore a description
of the methods employed at some of the mines may be
useful in planning operations in other regions, and is presented in
this bulletin.
The coals of Washington differ in quality, ranging from true lignites
in Cowlitz County in the southern part of the State to anthracites
in the Mount Baker district of Whatcom County, in the north~
rn part. Most of the output consists of subbituminous and bituminous
coals, the latter including both coking and noncoking varieties.
Analyses of the coals of the State and descriptions of the beds from
which the samples were taken have been printed in publications of
the United States Bureau of Mines.2 Details of coal beds and analyses of the coals of King, Kittitas, and Pierce Counties have also
been published by the Washington Geological Survey; 3 and most of
the coal beds of the State are described in some detail in a bulletin
of the United States Geological Survey.4
In 1918 mining was in progress at 72 mines in the State 4a; 46 of
these mines each employed more than 10 men underground. These
mines were distributed as follows: Thurston County, 1; Lewis
County, 7; Kittitas County, 14; King County, 16; Pierce County, 6;
Skagit County, 1; and Whatcom County, 1. During that year a
total of 5,847 men were employed, 4,172 underground and 1,675 on
the surface. The average number of days worked in the State was
275, and the average yearly output per man was 706 tons.
Coke is made only in Pierce County by four companies, which have
a total of 341 beehive ovens. In 1918 they produced 93,699 tons of
coke.
Up to 1919 mining machines were little used in the State. In
1917 only 6.61 per cent of the coal :produced was undercut by machines.
In that year 58.95 per cent of the coal was mined by hand,
and 34.44 per cent was shot off the solid. The explosives used were
as follows: Black powder, 36.6 per cent; dynamite, 38.l per cent;
and permissible, 25.3 per cent.
The State of Washington is divided naturally into two parts by
the Cascade Mountains which extend north and south somewhat
west of the middle of the State. The coal areas east of the range will
hereafter be referred to as eastern Washington-though nearly all
of it is west of the middle of the State-and that on the west side as
western Washington. The geographical distribution of the coal
fields is shown in Plate I.
Exploration of the State has not been exhaustive enough to preclude
the possibility of discovering, besides the foregoing, other districts
that contain deposits of coal in commercial quantities.
Citation
APA:
(1924) Bulletin 190 COAL-MINING PROBLEMS IN THE STATE OF WASHINGTONMLA: Bulletin 190 COAL-MINING PROBLEMS IN THE STATE OF WASHINGTON. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1924.