The Upper Pennsylvanian Pittsburgh Coal Bed: Geology And Mine Models

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
W. D. Watson L. F. Ruppert S. J. Tewalt L. J. Bragg
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
12
File Size:
1018 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

The U.S. Geological Survey recently completed a digital coal resource assessment model of the Upper Pennsylvanian Pittsburgh coal bed which indicates that of the original 34 billion short tons [31 billion tonnes] of coal, 16 billion short tons [14 billion tonnes] remain after subtracting mined-out coal. When technical, environmental, and social restrictions are applied to the remaining Pittsburgh coal model, only12 billion short tons [11 billion tonnes] are available for mining. Our assessment models estimate that up to 0.61 billion short tons [0.55 billion tonnes], 2.7billion short tons [2.4 billion tonnes], and 8.5 billion short tons [7.7 billion tonnes] could be available for surface mining, continuous mining, and longwall mining, respectively. This analysis is an example of a second-generation regional coal availability study designed to model recoverability characteristics for all the major coal beds in the U.S.
Citation

APA: W. D. Watson L. F. Ruppert S. J. Tewalt L. J. Bragg  (2000)  The Upper Pennsylvanian Pittsburgh Coal Bed: Geology And Mine Models

MLA: W. D. Watson L. F. Ruppert S. J. Tewalt L. J. Bragg The Upper Pennsylvanian Pittsburgh Coal Bed: Geology And Mine Models. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2000.

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