Scranton Paper - Note on the Formatior1 of Coal from Mine-Timber

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. S. Moffat
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
192 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1887

Abstract

Members of the Institute who have visited the works of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company at Scranton, will remember the exposure of a large vein of anthracite coal in the rocky bank on the south side of Roaring Brook, near the blast-furnace. The vein is quite flat, and is exposed to view for several hundred yards along the banks of the brook, a few feet above the surface of the water. It is some ten feet in thickness, and is known as the Big Vein. At a point just opposite the blast-furnace, much of the coal from this vein was mined out many years since, the usual pillars being left to support the overlying rock and drift, which are here some twentyfive to thirty feet in thickness. Over thirty pears ago fire was communicated from an ore-roasting pile on the surface of the ground at this point, through an old shaft, down to the refuse and pillars which had been left in the mine
Citation

APA: E. S. Moffat  (1887)  Scranton Paper - Note on the Formatior1 of Coal from Mine-Timber

MLA: E. S. Moffat Scranton Paper - Note on the Formatior1 of Coal from Mine-Timber. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1887.

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