Current And Proposed Regulations And Legislation On Water Pollution Concerning The Appalachian Coal Industry

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
C. T. Holland
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
27
File Size:
1123 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1969

Abstract

Coal mining has been an important industry in the Appalachian area for many years. This is particularly true in the northern part of the area, namely, in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio. Also, in the south a great deal of mining activity has been carried on in Alabama, Kentucky, and southwest Virginia. Some of the by-products of this activity has been the production of mineralized water from the mines in copious quantitites. The southern Appalachians have been somewhat more fortunate in that the water there has had a considerable amount of alkalinity in it, which has to a large extent eliminated some of the more undesirable aspects of mine drainage. Northern Appalachia, including central and western Pennsylvania, the Monongahela basin in West Virginia, and the Appalachian area in eastern Ohio have not been so fortunate in that coals in those areas and the top and bottom rock have, in many cases, shown considerable quantities of pyrite, and the water does not carry the carbonates found farther south.
Citation

APA: C. T. Holland  (1969)  Current And Proposed Regulations And Legislation On Water Pollution Concerning The Appalachian Coal Industry

MLA: C. T. Holland Current And Proposed Regulations And Legislation On Water Pollution Concerning The Appalachian Coal Industry. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1969.

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