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Coal.  Carboniferous Period~ 360-287 million years ago  Dead plants-> sunk to bottom of swamps- >formed peat->covered by sand and clay- >sedimentary.

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Presentation on theme: "Coal.  Carboniferous Period~ 360-287 million years ago  Dead plants-> sunk to bottom of swamps- >formed peat->covered by sand and clay- >sedimentary."— Presentation transcript:

1 Coal

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3  Carboniferous Period~ 360-287 million years ago  Dead plants-> sunk to bottom of swamps- >formed peat->covered by sand and clay- >sedimentary rock  Increase in material stacked on top=more weight->pressed down on peat->squeezed until water came out->over millions of years turned into coal, oil, petroleum or natural gas

4 1. Highly concentrated organic material 2. Organic material must be cut off from oxygen 3. Organic material be arranged in a way that enhances its energy content

5  Conventional Fossil Fuels  least expensive to produce  Supply nearly all energy provided by fossil fuels  Ex: coal, oil, and natural gas  Unconventional Fossil Fuels  More expensive to produce  May replace conventional once they are depleted  Ex: oil shales and tar sands

6  Wood shortage in Europe during 16 th century  17 th and 18 th centuries- developed technologies to make steel and steam engines that used coal  Powered the industrial revolution

7  Coal- more energy per unit  Coal- more noxious gas (difficult to burn in confined spaces with poor ventilation)  Coal- needed to be mined, unlike wood  Coal- harder to ignite

8  Formed from remains of once living plants and animals->highly concentrated organic material  Coastal and inland swamps 40 degrees north and south of equator

9 1. Anthracite  90% carbon  22-28 million Btu/ton 2. Bituminous  19-27.2 million Btu/ton 3. Lignite  13 million Btu/ton  Relatively immature- can sometimes see woody plant material

10 1. Underground mining  2 or more shafts down to deposit  One shaft to move miners, coal, and materials; other for ventilation  One of the most hazardous jobs in US and throughout world

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12 2. Mountaintop Removal  Vegetation and soil are removed  Set off multiple explosions->separates coal from the rocks

13 3. Surface Mining  Remove soil and rock above coal seam  Bulldozers put coal into dump trunks  Transported onto trains or mixed with water and moved through pipelines-> expensive

14  United States holds the world's largest estimated recoverable reserves of coal and is a net exporter of coal.  2011- US coal mines produced over a billion short tons of coal- more than 90% of this coal used by U.S. power plants to generate electricity.

15  Before 1977, surface coal mining landowners had abandoned 1.1 million coal mine sites in the United States

16  Balances the need to protect the environment from the adverse effects of surface coal mining with the Nation's need for coal as an essential energy source.  Operations are conducted in an environmentally responsible manner and that the land is adequately reclaimed during and following the mining process

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18  While coal has been the largest source of electricity generation for over 60 years, its annual share of generation declined from 49% in 2007 to 42% in 2011 as some power producers switched to lower-priced natural gas.

19  Produced in 25 states spread across three coal- producing regions.  In 2011, approximately 72% of production originated in five states: Wyoming, West Virginia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and Texas.

20  More than 1,400 coal-fired electricity generating units in operation at more than 600 plants across the country.  Generate over 40% of the electricity produced in the United States and consume more than 900 million short tons of coal per year.

21  Produces several types of emissions that adversely affect the environment  sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and heavy metals (such as mercury and arsenic) and acid gases (such as hydrogen chloride), which have been linked to acid rain, smog, and health issues.  Emits carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas.

22  In 2011, coal accounted for 34% of the energy- related carbon dioxide emissions in the United States.  On the production-side, coal mining can have a negative impact on ecosystems and water quality, and alter landscapes and scenic views

23  Outflow of acidic water from a mining site  Major problem with many hard rock mines, including almost all mines where the metal ore is bound up with sulfur.  metals dissolved by the acid drainage poison downstream waters

24  Many river systems and former mine sites are totally inhospitable to aquatic life, with the exception of "extremophile" bacteria.  ecological destruction in watersheds and the contamination of human water sources by sulfuric acid and heavy metals, including arsenic, copper, and lead

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26  Coal Mining Coal Mining


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