Coalification | geology | Britannica (original) (raw)
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major reference
In coal: Peat The process of peat formation—biochemical coalification—is most active in the upper few metres of a peat deposit. Fungi are not found below about 0.5 metre (about 18 inches), and most forms of microbial life are eliminated at depths below about 10 metres (about 30 feet). If either the rate of… Read More
In brown coal …are still recognizable, indicating little coalification beyond peat. Brown coals can be distinguished from higher-ranked coals by observing their behaviour in dilute nitric acid or boiling potassium hydroxide solution. Brown coals react to produce a reddish solution, whereas higher-ranked coals do not react. Read More
coal formation
In coal mining: Coalification In geologic terms, coal is a sedimentary rock containing a mixture of constituents, mostly of vegetal origin. Vegetal matter is composed mainly of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and some inorganic mineral elements. When this material decays under water, in the absence of oxygen,… Read More
In coal utilization: Coal rank …and geochemical processes is called coalification. The nature of the constituents in coal is related to the degree of coalification, the measurement of which is termed rank. Rank is usually assessed by a series of tests, collectively called the proximate analysis, that determine the moisture content, volatile matter content, ash… Read More
lignite
In lignite …is the first product of coalification and is intermediate between peat and subbituminous coal according to the coal classification used in the United States and Canada. In many countries lignite is considered to be a brown coal. Lignite contains about 60 to 70 percent carbon (on a dry, ash-free basis)… Read More
macerals
In maceral Macerals are coalified plant remains preserved in coal and other rocks. They change progressively, both chemically and physically, as the rank of coal increases. (Coal rank is a measure of a coal’s degree of metamorphism expressed as its position in the lignite-to-anthracite series and is primarily based… Read More
peat
In peat: Peat formation …the first step in the formation of coal. With increasing depth of burial and increasing temperature, peat deposits are gradually changed to lignite. With increased time and higher temperatures, these low-rank coals are gradually converted to subbituminous and bituminous coal and under certain conditions to anthracite. Read More
subbituminous coal
In subbituminous coal In general, low-sulfur coal formed in continental, freshwater basins (such as the Green River and Powder River basins of the western United States) possesses much lower levels of sulfates than coal from basins adjacent to marine environments. Read More