Coal Mining Methods, with Especial Reference to Improved Methods and Higher Extraction - Systems of Coal Mining in Western Washington (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Simon H. Ash
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
41
File Size:
1713 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1925

Abstract

The coal-mining districts of Washington are mainly west of the Cascade Mountains; Fig. 1. The mines are on the foot hills of the slope, the lignite fields of Lewis and Thurston counties extending into the valleys west of the mountains. An exception is the Roslyn field, a small but important area on the eastern slope. If western Washington is divided into three areas from north to south, the bituminous coal fields and most of the active operations will be found largely in the middle area. The southern portion contains lignites over a large area. In the northern portion, mining is practically restricted to one mine, the Bellingham, which is working a subbituminous coal seam near the city of Bellingham. The degree of alteration that the coal of a particular field has undergone may be gaged roughly by the position of the field with reference to the Cascade Mountains. The lignites of Tenino, Tono, Mendota, and Castle Rock, on the railway line connecting Seattle and Portland, occur in a region of low relief, in which the Eocene coal measures have suffered only minor disturbances. Subbituminous coals occur in the foot hills, as at Renton, Newcastle, and Bellingham. Coalg high in fixed carbon are found nearer the mountains, where the measures have been sharply tilted and folded, as at Black Diamond and Carbonado. The two typical anthracite fields are located still higher, in the rugged mountains where outcrops appear both in deep gorges and on ridges at elevations approaching 5000 ft. At Carbonado is found the only semianthracitc seam worked on a commercial basis. The occurrence of this seam in a region of bituminous coal is due to the nearness of an igneous sill, which has changed its character from bituminous to semianthracite. Purpose of Paper On account of the various faults and dips and the varying nature of the wall rock, many difficulties are encountered in mining and winning the coal. The paper gives some of the methods used in mining and, in some detail, the conditions that affect the efficiency of these methods.
Citation

APA: Simon H. Ash  (1925)  Coal Mining Methods, with Especial Reference to Improved Methods and Higher Extraction - Systems of Coal Mining in Western Washington (with Discussion)

MLA: Simon H. Ash Coal Mining Methods, with Especial Reference to Improved Methods and Higher Extraction - Systems of Coal Mining in Western Washington (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account