Bulletin 221 Production and Briquetting of Carbonized Lignite

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
E. J. Babcock W. W. Odell
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
95
File Size:
6455 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1923

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines since its establishment has always taken an active interest in the utilization of lignite and in the development of the lignite dep'osits of the United States. Extensive lignite fields occur in the west central States, notably in North Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and Texas; there are smaller areas in several other States, some of which are widely separated. The total area of the deposits and the total amount of lignite in these several districts are so enormous that the economic value is seldom recognized. To the people of ·the west and west central regions, however, the larger utilization of lignite, in whatever form it may be, is of fundamental importance, and any new methods or uses that promise to open these great lignite fields for more general and more efficient use deserve careful study. Although these lignite deposits underlie areas of thousands of square miles, their development and general utilization has been rather slow. This is no doubt partly because many of the districts are not thickly settled or highly developed in manufacturing industries, but is largely because lignites, from their peculiar physical and chemical characteristics, are low-grade fuels. Most of the lignites in these areas are imperfectly developed coals; many have a more or less woody structure; some belong to the brown-coal type; and others are darker, denser, and more homogeneous, approaching subbituminous coal. The people living in the regions in which these vast deposits occur, especially in the west central part of the United States, are vitally interested in every effort toward bettering lignite as fuel and aiding its wider utilization.
Citation

APA: E. J. Babcock W. W. Odell  (1923)  Bulletin 221 Production and Briquetting of Carbonized Lignite

MLA: E. J. Babcock W. W. Odell Bulletin 221 Production and Briquetting of Carbonized Lignite. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1923.

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