Coal in the Union of South Africa - Supply Adequate for Domestic and Export Demand, With Large Undeveloped Reserves

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Sidney H. Haughton
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
215 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1945

Abstract

WHEN the white pioneers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries advanced from the coastal settlements of southern Africa into the interior of the subcontinent, they found it inhabited, more or less sparsely, by brown or black peoples mainly of pastoral habits but equipped with a fighting spirit and certain fighting weapons. Some of the tribes were smiths, others were miners and metallurgists; all used fuel, either industrially or domestically. Some of that fuel was wood, some cattle dung, and in some places the natives mined outcrop coal. Coal was first discovered by Europeans in Natal about 1840. After proper deliberation and after allowing due time for a consideration of all the implications, the Natal Government decided in 1881 (40 years after) to import an English expert to investigate and report on the discovery. Things then moved rapidly, and in what to a geologist is the remarkably short space of eight years, Natal collieries were producing at the rate of nearly 30,000 long tons per annum or 100 long tons per working day!
Citation

APA: Sidney H. Haughton  (1945)  Coal in the Union of South Africa - Supply Adequate for Domestic and Export Demand, With Large Undeveloped Reserves

MLA: Sidney H. Haughton Coal in the Union of South Africa - Supply Adequate for Domestic and Export Demand, With Large Undeveloped Reserves. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1945.

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