RI 2221 Cannel Coal in Southern Utah

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 794 KB
- Publication Date:
- Feb 1, 1921
Abstract
The increasing activity in oil shale has had a tendency to direct the
attention of the industry to any substance from which gasoline or other oils can
be secured .
Cannel coal for many years has been known, as a source of oil and formerly
it was the only substance from which kerosene was obtained . The name of coal oil
was given to kerosene because it was derived from cannel coal before any flowing
wells were brought in in the United States .
In an isolated region in Southern Utah there is an unusually thick and
clean bed of cannel coal which laboratory experiments indicate can be made to
yield about seventy gallons of oil to the ton . This coal was first described in
Bulletin 341 of the United States Geological Survey under the title of Colob coal
field . This field lies at the western and southern base of the Colcb plateau and
extends from the town of Cedar City southward to Kanarra and then southeastward
to the town of Mount Carmel . Cedar City is 35 miles south of east from Lund on
the Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad which is the nearest railroad point .
Mount Carmel is about 90 miles south of Marysvale , on the Denver and Rio Grande
Railroad , which is the nearest railroad point from the eastern end of the field .
The Colob coal occurs in Lower Cretaceous rocks and a number of wagon
mines have been opened on the seam in the vicinity of Cedar City , Kanarra , and
Mt. Carmel , but between these places the field has been very little prospected .
The cannel coal , so far as known at present , is limited to a small area
on the head waters of the north fork of the Virgin River in Township 39 and 40
South , Range 9 East . In this region it occurs as a bed 5-1 /2 feet thick over
which lies a layer of bituminous coal 2 feet and 5 inches thick .
Citation
APA:
(1921) RI 2221 Cannel Coal in Southern UtahMLA: RI 2221 Cannel Coal in Southern Utah. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1921.