Coal Paleobotany - Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Reinhardt Thiessen
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
60
File Size:
13840 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1941

Abstract

This paper presents only the highlights of previous research on the paleobotany of coal. The accumulated material has become so vast that a comprehensive review of all findings relating to paleobotany would be far too long. The fact that coal is derived from plants is now so well-known that no further comment is required, but knowledge of the mode of transformation of plant substances into coal is not so general. The plant matter goes first through processes of semirottins-, maceration, and elimination of certain material to form peat, which is then further transformed into coal. The first stage has been termed the "biochemical process," because the more important changes take place under the influence of micro-organisms. Near the end of the biochemical action an unconsolidated peat is formed. The second or "dynamochemical process," caused by the addition of superincumbent rock strata such as sandstones and shales and application of additional pressure and possibly heat through mountain-building forces, results in the formation of higher-rank coals ranging from brown coal to anthracite. These stages in trans-formation of plant material to coal have been described in previous reports.4 The main object of this paper is to bring to the notice of paleobotanists the fact that coal contains an enormous amount of material in a remarkably good state of preservation. Although some of the coal-forming matter has lost its identity, much of the original structure is retained. A large proportion of the coal, therefore, particularly of common bright coals, comprises constituents or components that invariably have retained some of the original plant structure, and many of these structures may be assigned to certain plants. The identity of these plants and of the remains forms the subject of this paper.
Citation

APA: Reinhardt Thiessen  (1941)  Coal Paleobotany - Introduction

MLA: Reinhardt Thiessen Coal Paleobotany - Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1941.

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