RI 4222 Preparation and Carbonization Characteristics of Low-Volatile Coal from Oyon Region of Peru

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 1029 KB
- Publication Date:
- Mar 1, 1948
Abstract
"INTRODUCTION Preliminary tests of the Oyon coal constituted part of a wartime exploratory and development program in which many agencies participated. The general objective was to find new and adequate source of fuel and other raw materials for greatly expanded industry.The Oyon coal field, known for at least a hundred years to the mining people of Peru, offers a possible source of high-grade process fuel for the growing metallurgical industries of South America and the Pacific coast. Santolalla 4/ reports that low-volatile coal from this region was used in local smelting operations as early as 1850. It has been mined in very small quanti¬ties for many years and used in neighboring mining camps and villages. Small quantities are regularly used at Oroya for the manufacture of carbide, and in recent years small-scale coking operations in specially designed ovens in the region have demonstrated that these coals will make dense coke.During this long period of desultory operations many small openings have been made scattered over a wide area in this general region, indicating very extensive occurrence of the coal measures, although systematic exploration work has not been undertaken. However, current development work of the Banco Minero del Peru has opened up several substantially parallel highly inclined or vertical beds of workable thickness and has followed these deposits to sufficient lateral extent to prove fairly well the existence of substantial reserves on this property."
Citation
APA:
(1948) RI 4222 Preparation and Carbonization Characteristics of Low-Volatile Coal from Oyon Region of PeruMLA: RI 4222 Preparation and Carbonization Characteristics of Low-Volatile Coal from Oyon Region of Peru. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1948.