Albany Paper - Application of Electricity in the Anthracite Coal-Field of Pennsylvania, with Special Reference to the Wyoming Field (Discussion, p. 976)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 30
- File Size:
- 1931 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1904
Abstract
The term " Anthracite Coal-Field " is generally used to refer to a comparatively small territory lying in the eastern-central part of Pennsylvania. This territory includes about 3,300 sq. miles of area, located chiefly in five counties in which anthracite-mining is the dominant industry. Although an area of 3,300 sq. miles is embraced in the region, less than one-fifth of this area, or only 484 sq. miles, is underlain by workable coal-seams. Moreover, this prorluctive portion is not a continuous area, but consists of a number of detached basins. These are known as the Northern, containing 176 sq. miles; Eastern-Middle, containing 133 sq. miles; Southern, containing 181 sq. miles; and western-Middle,containing 194 sq. miles. From the standpoint of business and trade, the region is divided into three districts, known as (1) the Wyoming, which includes the Northern field and the small Bernice basin; (2) the Lehigh region, which includes all of the Eastern Middle field and that part of the Southern field east of Tamaqua; and (3) the Schuylkill region, which includes the WesL ern-Middle field and that part of the Southern field west of Tamaqua. The relative commercial importance of these districts at the present time is shown by the coal-shipments as given in the following table :
Citation
APA:
(1904) Albany Paper - Application of Electricity in the Anthracite Coal-Field of Pennsylvania, with Special Reference to the Wyoming Field (Discussion, p. 976)MLA: Albany Paper - Application of Electricity in the Anthracite Coal-Field of Pennsylvania, with Special Reference to the Wyoming Field (Discussion, p. 976). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1904.