Cleveland Paper - The Mahoning Valley Coal Regions

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Andrew Roy
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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3
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130 KB
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Abstract

The Mahoning Valley coal region lies on the extreme northern outcrop of the Ohio coal-field, and all the mines, with one exception, are opened on the lower coal of the series, No. 1 of the Ohio Geological Survey. The coal ranges from an inch to five, six, and sometimes seven feet thickness, the workable height being between two and a half and six feet. There are two varieties of coal, known in market as "Briar Hill coal " and " Mineral Ridge coal;" both varieties are drawn from the same seam. The Briar Hill coal is generally called block coal, and is the kind so largely used in a raw state in smelting iron. It possesses a laminated structure, easily splitting into horizontal sheets, but is very difficult to break in the opposite direction. The faces of the layers are often covered with a soft, dead, carbonaceous material, like charcoal, and the whole seam throughout is marked by alternate layers of dead and bright-looking coal. In the act of combustion the coal neither swells nor changes form, the masses retaining their shapes until they fall to ashes in the furnace. The Mineral Ridge variety is much softer, and is also shorter in the grain than the Briar Hill kind, and it contains a good deal of
Citation

APA: Andrew Roy  Cleveland Paper - The Mahoning Valley Coal Regions

MLA: Andrew Roy Cleveland Paper - The Mahoning Valley Coal Regions. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers,

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