History Of Coal Mining (d035a8b4-3570-4676-b760-d22c1455867a)

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Samuel M. Cassidy
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
13
File Size:
718 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1981

Abstract

The exact date of man's first use of coal is lost in antiquity. The discovery that certain black rock would burn was undoubtedly accidental and probably occurred independently and many times in the world over thousands of years. It is quite likely that these independent discoveries were made when primitive man chanced to build camp fires on exposed ledges of a black rock, then was amazed when it caught fire. The Chinese recorded the use of coal 1100 years before the Christian Era and from the Bible we learn that King Solomon was familiar with coal in what is now Syria. In Wales, there .is evidence that the Bronze Age people used coal for funeral pyres, and it is known that the Romans used this fuel. There are other ancient references. So the knowledge that coal would burn, and even some uses of that knowledge, go back thousands of years. However, practical and consistent use of coal seems to date to England in the Middle Ages.
Citation

APA: Samuel M. Cassidy  (1981)  History Of Coal Mining (d035a8b4-3570-4676-b760-d22c1455867a)

MLA: Samuel M. Cassidy History Of Coal Mining (d035a8b4-3570-4676-b760-d22c1455867a). Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1981.

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