Progressive Regional Carbonization Of Coals

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
David White
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
27
File Size:
1251 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 2, 1925

Abstract

ATTENTION has been given to the sources and supply of the raw vegetal matter and. the conditions of its submission to the process of sedimentation. An original and most valuable review has been made of the more important or significant chemical compounds originally contained in the organic debris, and of the biochemical changes-undergone by the latter during deposition. Consideration also has been given to the factors controlling the selective biochemical decomposition, in whole or in part, of :this debris, and the deposition, as, sediments, of the undecomposed plant structures and compounds, together with more or less of the so-called "ulmic," or "humic," organic decomposition products in colloidal solution.1 BIOCHEMICAL CHANGES END IN PEAT FORMATION The biochemical process terminates in the peat stage of coal formation, and with the cessation of this process organic sedimentation is completed. All subsequent changes result from geological causes and conditions. The deposits are in the form of peats of different types, organic muds, oozes, etc. They are essentially uncompressed and are wholly unconsolidated, and their water content is great, amounting to over 85 per cent. near the surface of the deposit. Many of the chemical compounds remain as in the once living organisms; others are biochemically broken down and new ones formed.
Citation

APA: David White  (1925)  Progressive Regional Carbonization Of Coals

MLA: David White Progressive Regional Carbonization Of Coals. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.

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