Monday, March 11, 2013
LBJ's coal notes
In
class we are learning about coal in Appalachia and how it is formed and all of
its purposes. The coal we are mining right now is from the Pennsylvania period
300 million years ago when swampy plants got buried under the ground with no
oxygen to decompose them. This absence of
oxygen prevents total decay and forms peat which is like a moss that has a low
heat let off. A different kind of coal is lignite. Sometimes called brown coal,
lignite is low carbon concentrated and is found in in Alaska and western states
but has a low heat value. The most common coal is Bituminous coal. It has a
high carbon value and burns really hot. This is what we have been mining in our
mines for many years now. The byproduct
of burning coal is what is called coke and it is primarily used in the steel
industry.
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