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Coal is Abundant
America has more coal than any
other fossil fuel resource. The
U.S. also has more coal reserves
than any other single country in
the world. In fact, 25% of all the
known coal in the world is in the
United States. Large coal deposits
can be found in 38 of the 50
states. |
The Origins of Coal
Coal is a fossil fuel that formed from
the remains of vegetation that grew as
long as 400 million years ago. Contrary
to what some people believe, coal is not
the remains of dead dinosaurs.
Coal is sometimes referred to as "buried
sunshine" because the plants, which
formed coal, captured energy from the
sun through photosynthesis to create the
compounds that make up plant tissues.
The most important element in the plant
material is carbon, which gives coal
most of its energy.
Most of our coal was formed about 300
million years ago, when much of the
earth was covered by steamy swamps. As
plants and trees died, their remains
sank to the bottom of the swampy areas,
accumulating layer upon layer and
eventually forming a soggy, dense
material called peat.
Over long periods of time, the makeup of
the earth’s surface changed, and seas
and great rivers caused deposits of
sand, clay and other mineral matter to
accumulate, burying the peat. Sandstone
and other sedimentary rocks were formed,
and the pressure caused by their weight
squeezed water from the peat.
Increasingly deeper burial and the heat
associated with it gradually changed the
material to coal. Scientists estimate
that from 3 to 7 feet of compacted plant
matter was required to form 1 foot of
bituminous coal.
Coal formation is a continuing process
(some of our newest coal is a mere 1
million years old). Today, in areas such
as the Great Dismal Swamp of North
Carolina and Virginia, the Okefenokee
Swamp of Georgia, and the Everglades in
Florida, plant life decays and subsides,
eventually to be covered by silts and
sands and other matter. Perhaps millions
of years from now, those areas will
contain large coal beds.
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