Washing Domestic Coal

Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute
I. M. Charles
Organization:
Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute
Pages:
4
File Size:
489 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1926

Abstract

Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen: At the request of our Secretary, Mr. Shubart, I am pleased to present the following brief discussion of the Alamo Washery. In order to insure an excellent and uniform preparation of nut coal, the Alamo Coal Company erected last year a modern washery at a cost of about $50,000, in which, since the completion last December, all of the nut coal shipped from the Alamo Mine, has been washed. In part of the workings of the Alamo Mine, the coal is overlaid by a lenticular strata of slate, which invariably falls when the coal is shot down and breaks for the most part into fragments of such size as pass through three-inch round perforations, and are retained on plates having one and a fourth inch round holes with the nut coal. This "draw slate" comprises the principal impurity in the Alamo coal, and to remove it, some bone and a few small fragments of sandstone from the roof and floor, the washery was designed and erected. The few impurities contained in the lamp are readily re-
Citation

APA: I. M. Charles  (1926)  Washing Domestic Coal

MLA: I. M. Charles Washing Domestic Coal. Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, 1926.

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