Degasification of Coal Seams at a Profit

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Leo Ranney
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
3
File Size:
285 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1943

Abstract

ANY years ago a prospector came to a Nevada town and built himself a shack. Day after day he searched the hills for gold -but he found none. He closed his shack and hurried north, where a strike had been made. Next he tried to trap the flour gold that floats down the Snake River. He panned the black sands along the Oregon coast. He ranged over the mountains and up the gulches of far-off Alaska. At last, broken in health, six years ago he came back to his old home in Nevada. There his shack still stood-nobody wanted it. One day he started a garden in the rocky soil that he owned. His spade turned up a chunk of quartz, and in that quartz were stringers of gold. He had found a rich gold vein, running right under his own house. You gas producers who have hurried to Oklahoma, Louisiana, East Texas, South Texas, West Texas, even to California to drill wildcat holes a mile or two miles deep-why not, like the old gold prospector, have a look in your own back yard? Some of your coal seams contain 20,000,000 cu. ft. of natural gas per acre.
Citation

APA: Leo Ranney  (1943)  Degasification of Coal Seams at a Profit

MLA: Leo Ranney Degasification of Coal Seams at a Profit. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1943.

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