Circular 530: Difference between revisions
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them, such as channels, splits, rolls, limestone bosses, clay | them, such as channels, splits, rolls, limestone bosses, clay | ||
and igneous dikes, and coal balls?{{info:Another publication discusses faults: Illinois State Geological Survey Circular 523, Faults and Their Effect on Coal Mining in lllinois, W. J . Nelson, 1981|note}} | and igneous dikes, and coal balls?{{#info:Another publication discusses faults: Illinois State Geological Survey Circular 523, Faults and Their Effect on Coal Mining in lllinois, W. J . Nelson, 1981|note}} | ||
Revision as of 11:29, December 13, 2023
Geologic Disturbances in Illinois Coal Seams
W. John Nelson
Abstract
Mining problems result when coal seams are broken, distorted, or intruded upon by geologic features such as:
- Channels - (Pleistoceneor Pennsylvanian riverbeds) filled with rock or unconsolidated deposits that cut into coal seams, weaken roof strata, and store groundwater. Near some channels, coal may be thick, low in sulfur and high in ash content-and split.
- Splits - (overbank or floodwater deposits in peat swamps) that are layers of noncoal materials divide coal seams horizontally; they either make it impossible to mine the seam as one unit, or increase the product's waste rock and ash content.
- Rolls - (small, infilled channels) or lenses of roof rock that protrude into the top of coal seams, producing steep dips or abruptly thin seams as well as poor roof conditions.
- Clay dikes - (vertical, clay-filled cracks in peat) that in trude from overlying rock into coal seams, increase the product's waste rock and ash content, and cause unstable roof conditions.
- Ingneous dikes - (magma-filled fractures in coal seams) intrude steep walls of rock into coal seams; they may be surrounded by coal coked from the heat of the magma.
- Coal balls - (mineralized peat)-so hard and dense compared to the surrounding coal that massive deposits damage mining equipment and sometimes halt operations.
Other disturbances include limestone bosses, white top, joints in coal and roof rock, and deformation by glacial ice, concretions, and fossil tree stumps. Most can be recognized during exploratory drilling and by use of seismic exploration or surveying. Some features, such as channels and splits, are extensive enough t o be mapped ahead of mining; others are localized and unpredictable.
Introduction
Coal miners always face obstacles in their struggle t o win
coal from the earth. Coal beds-normally thick, level, and
continuous-sometimes pitch sharply up or down, split into
layers too thin t o follow, fill with veins of clay or masses
of stone, or end abruptly against solid rock. Unexpectedly,
the roof may become almost impossible to support.
Volumes of water or deadly gases may rush in a t the face.
The risks and the costs, especially in lives, are great for
miners, mine owners, and mining communities.
Locating, predicting, and controlling geologic hazards
in coal seams depend upon knowing how they formed:
What combination of climate, landscape, and vegetation
produced coal seams and the disturbances associated with
them, such as channels, splits, rolls, limestone bosses, clay
and igneous dikes, and coal balls?Another publication discusses faults: Illinois State Geological Survey Circular 523, Faults and Their Effect on Coal Mining in lllinois, W. J . Nelson, 1981
According to geologists, most of these disturbances
developed while the coal itself was forming-during the
Pennsylvanian Period, approximately 315 to 280 million
years ago. A t this time, coal beds and other sedimentary
rocks began as layers of peat, mud, silt, and sand deposited
in rivers, lakes, swamps, deltas, tidal flats, and oceans. The
original sediments were often laid down irregularly. Peat
beds were frequently scoured and ripped up when rivers
changed courses or overflowed banks; or they were torn
apart when underlying sediments slumped in landslides.
Later, the coal-to-be was squeezed and contorted as it was
buried beneath thousands of feet of sediment; and occa-
sionally, coal seams were pierced and baked by molten
magma. More recently, during the Pleistocene Epoch, enor-
mous masses of glacial ice deformed coal beds near the
surface, while rivers of glacial meltwater washed away
other coal seams.
To describe the problems, then to identify the causes
of these disturbances in Illinois coal seams required exten-
sive mapping of both surface and underground mines. Field
investigation for this project covered every active mine in
Illinois. Other sources of information included the Geolog-
ical Survey's large collection of notes, photos, sketches, and
maps of active and abandoned mines as well as drillers' logs,
geophysical logs, and core descriptions.