Environmental Conditions Of Deposition Of Coal

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
David White
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
21
File Size:
939 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1925

Abstract

THE environmental conditions under which coals are deposited are revealed by the stratigraphy of the coal basins and coal beds and by the details of the structure and the physical constitution of the coals themselves. THE LAND SURFACE Generally Low Relief or Base Level In the Paleozoic coal fields, which have longest been worked, are most important, and are best known, we find relations, in general, as follows A post-Mississippian uplift with, in most cases, very moderate deformation, followed by erosion by which the uplifted regions, especially the bolder of the new topography, were largely worn down, while the older and less deformed regions were more or less extensively base leveled. Base leveling of most of the region continued as the deposition of coal measures proceeded. Consequently, in most coal fields the Pennsylvanian, or upper Carboniferous, lies unconformably on the Mississippian or on older formations. There are but few regions in which sedimentation is seen to have been apparently continuous from the Mississippian into the Pennsylvanian ("Coal Measures").
Citation

APA: David White  (1925)  Environmental Conditions Of Deposition Of Coal

MLA: David White Environmental Conditions Of Deposition Of Coal. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.

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