The Geologic Environment of Coking Coal of Western North America with Emphasis on the Canadian Scene

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Vard H. Johnson
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
8
File Size:
5570 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1972

Abstract

"In contrast with the well-publicized Pittsburgh coal, and the Everglades of Florida, most coal-forming swamps of Cretaceous time in western North America occupied relatively limited areas. They formed in areas of irregular subsidence, bounded by the changing levee systems of meandering streams. Coke quality is determined by the physical and chemical behaviour of the vitrain during thermal decomposition. Vitrain is at least in part a colloidal substance, originally containing large proportions of water; its formation and survival depend on maintaining a shallow cover of stagnant water up to the time of burial. Heat from swamp fires or subaerial dyhydration could destroy it or impair its quality. Observed patterns suggest that the metamorphism is almost entirely thermal, and that there is little relation to tectonic stresses, or loading. These coals had probably achieved essentially their present rank prior to deformation. Evidence of frictional heating along the thrust planes is minimal or absent. Normally, coal beds are aquifers. Oxygen carried into the subsurface becomes available and reacts with the vitrain to destroy its natural thermoplastic properties. The tolerance of oxygen without loss of thermoplasticity is inversely related to the volatile content. Significant lateral variations of coal thickness are common and sometimes occur in short distances. In deformed areas these thickness changes are more commonly due to differential tectonic stress rather than to original thicknesses of coal. Locally, coal is known to have flowed into cavities, or fractures. These principals are discussed in relation to coal deposits of western Alberta and eastern British Columbia."
Citation

APA: Vard H. Johnson  (1972)  The Geologic Environment of Coking Coal of Western North America with Emphasis on the Canadian Scene

MLA: Vard H. Johnson The Geologic Environment of Coking Coal of Western North America with Emphasis on the Canadian Scene. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1972.

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