Coal Deposit, Coal Creek District, Gunnison County Colo.: Reserves, Coking Properties, And Petrographic And Chemical Characteristics ? Introduction

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 88
- File Size:
- 34201 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1952
Abstract
ALMOST all of the coal used for metallurgical purposes west of the Continental Divide is ruined from the Lower Sunnyside bed in Carbon County, Utah. Coke produced from Lower Sunnyside coal and used in western steel plants is weaker structurally than coke used elsewhere in this country. For this reason, western coal operators and steel manufacturers are anxious to develop new areas of coking coal of better quality than the coal produced from the Sunnyside bed. Early in the war, the Bureau of Mines undertook an intensive investigation of western coals to (a) develop additional reserves of coking coal to supplement proved reserves in the Sunnyside bed and (b) develop, if possible, reserves of coal with coking qualities superior to Lower Sunnyside coal. Results of investigations in the Kemmerer district, Wyoming,9 and in the Minnesota Creek area, Gunnison County, Colo.,10 have been published.
Citation
APA:
(1952) Coal Deposit, Coal Creek District, Gunnison County Colo.: Reserves, Coking Properties, And Petrographic And Chemical Characteristics ? IntroductionMLA: Coal Deposit, Coal Creek District, Gunnison County Colo.: Reserves, Coking Properties, And Petrographic And Chemical Characteristics ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1952.