The Use of Solid Fuels in the Pulverized State for the Generation of Steam

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
E. S. Malloch
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
19
File Size:
5322 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1928

Abstract

THE Great War forced the peoples of the world to recognize the importance of the wise development and use of the world's natural resources. Not the least, and perhaps the most, important, is the world's fuel supply- solid, liquid, and gaseous. Without fuel our civilization would be impossible, and mankind would of necessity have to congregate in the torrid zones of the earth's surface for at least six months of every year. Of the three classes of fuels the solid ones are the most plentiful, as well as being the most widely distributed, since few countries are entirely devoid of solid fuels of one kind or another. Until a hundred years ago wood was the fuel most generally used in this country, but since then coal has supplanted wood as a fuel in all its uses, except in the outlying districts and among the farming communities. For many years the supply of coal was thought to be unlimited, but as years went by more thought and study were given to the world's coal resources, until today not only are the limits known, but in one instance at least their depletion is predicted to be almost within the age of living men, unless more provident methods are put into practice for their winning and utilization.
Citation

APA: E. S. Malloch  (1928)  The Use of Solid Fuels in the Pulverized State for the Generation of Steam

MLA: E. S. Malloch The Use of Solid Fuels in the Pulverized State for the Generation of Steam. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1928.

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