<h2><SPAN name="page_241">COAL AND PETROLEUM</SPAN></h2>
<p class="indent">
People are beginning to ask where fuel will be obtained when the
coal-beds are exhausted and the petroleum is all pumped out of the
earth. The cold winters will not cease to come regularly, and we
shall continue to need fires for many purposes. This is a question
which need not trouble us. So long as the sun lasts in the sky
and the oceans cover so much of the earth, and so long as there
are mountains upon the land, there must be streams with rapids
and waterfalls. The power of these streams, which has for ages
gone to waste, is now being turned into electricity for purposes
of light and heat. We may be sure that long before the mines cease
to produce coal and the wells to supply petroleum, there will be
something better ready to take their places.</p>
<p class="indent">
But coal and petroleum are still such important commodities that
everyone should know something about the way in which they were
made. This earth of ours has had a very long history, much of which
has been recorded in the rocks beneath our feet, and the record
is more accurate than are many human histories which have been
preserved in the printed books.</p>
<p class="indent">
The story of the earth has been divided into different periods,
each marked by the predominance of certain kinds of living things.
The Carboniferous period has been so named because at that time
the climate and features of the earth in many places favored the
growth of dense and heavy vegetation. This vegetation accumulated
through the long years, so that it formed thick deposits which
gradually changed to beds of coal. It would be wrong, however, to
think that all the beds of coal were formed at about the same time.
Ever since there have been forests and marshes upon the earth there
have been opportunities for the forming of coal-beds. Materials
are accumulating even now which will in time be transformed to
beds of coal.</p>
<p class="indent">
We must be equally careful to gain correct ideas of the making
of petroleum, for many wrong notions are current. While coal has
come from the accumulation of plant remains, petroleum has been
derived from sea organisms, chiefly animals. If coal and petroleum
are found near each other, the occurrence is accidental and does
not mean that the two substances are in any way related.</p>
<p class="indent">
Our earth is very old, and its surface has gone through many
transformations; mountains, plains, and portions of the sea floor
have changed places with one another. Wherever there have been
marshy lowlands, since plants first began to grow luxuriantly upon
the earth, it has been possible for beds of coal to be formed.
We all know how rankly plants grow where there is plenty of heat
and moisture. Many of us have been in swampy forests and have seen
the masses of rotting tree trunks, limbs, and leaves. Now, if we
should form a picture in our minds of such a swamp slowly sinking
until the water of some lake or ocean had flowed over it and killed
the plants, and then washed sand and clay upon the buried forest
until it was covered deeply in the earth, we should understand
how the coal-beds began. Veins of coal that have been opened by
the miners frequently show trunks and stumps of trees, as well
as impressions of leaves and ferns. Underneath the coal there is
usually a bed of clay, while above sand or sandstone is commonly
found.</p>
<p class="indent">
The oldest coal has been changed the most. It is hard and rather
difficult to ignite, but when once on fire it gives more heat and
burns longer than other coals. This coal, known as anthracite, is
not found extensively in the United States outside of Pennsylvania.
Coal which is younger and has been less changed by the heat and
pressure brought to bear upon it when it was buried deep in the
earth, is known as bituminous. This is the kind of coal which is
found in the Mississippi and Ohio valleys, in the Rocky Mountains,
and upon the Pacific slope. A still younger coal, which is soft
and has a brownish color, is called lignite, and is found mostly
in the South and West.</p>
<p class="indent">
Still another sort of fuel, known as peat, is found in swamps where
considerable vegetation is now accumulating, or has accumulated
in recent times. Peat is a mass of plant stems, roots, and moss,
partly decayed and pressed together. In countries where wood is
scarce peat is cut out, dried, and used for fuel.</p>
<p class="indent">
The larger part of the coal in the eastern United States was formed
during the Carboniferous period. That part of our country was then
low and swampy; but the West, which is now an elevated area of
mountains and plateaus, was at that time largely beneath the ocean.</p>
<p class="indent">
Then, as the surface of the earth continued to change, the ocean
retreated from the Rocky Mountain region, and extensive marshy
lowlands with lakes of fresh or brackish water came into existence.
There were such marshes in the areas that are now covered by New
Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, Dakota, and Montana. Westward for some
distance the land was higher, but in the states of Washington,
Oregon, and California there were other marshy lowlands covered
with heavy vegetation.</p>
<p class="indent">
We know from what we have seen of the manner in which wood decays,
that in the dry, open air it does not accumulate, but is in great
part carried away by the wind. It is only in swamps and shallow
bodies of water that the decaying wood can gather in beds. From
these facts we have a right to draw conclusions as to the former
nature of the surface where there are no coal-beds. There are extensive
beds of limestone in the western United States which are of the
same age as the coal-beds in the east. As such beds of limestone
could have formed only in the ocean, their presence throws a good
deal of light upon the geography of those distant times.</p>
<p class="indent">
Upon the Pacific slope the marshes were not so extensive, nor did
they last for so long a period, as those in the East. Nature seems
to have confined her strongest efforts at coal-making to the country
east of the Rocky Mountains. Perhaps she thought that the people
of the West would not need coal if she gave them plenty of gold
and silver.</p>
<p class="indent">
In the Appalachian mountains Nature folded the strata and left
them in such a position that the coal could be mined easily. In
the Mississippi Valley the beds were left flat, almost in their
original position, so that shafts had to be sunk to reach the coal.
Upon the Pacific slope Nature seems to have had a large amount
of trouble in arranging things satisfactorily. She has made and
remade the mountains so many times, and folded and broken the crust
of the earth so severely where the swamps stood, that now large
portions of the coal beds which once existed have crumbled and
been washed away by the streams. The scanty supply of coal which
now remains is in most places hard to find and difficult to mine.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 513px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig_108.jpg" width-obs="513" height-obs="364" alt="Fig. 108">
FIG. 108.—SEAMS OF COAL ENCLOSED IN SANDSTONE, CALIFORNIA</div>
<p class="indent">
The best coal mined near the Pacific comes from Vancouver Island.
Large beds of a younger and poorer coal are found southeast of
Puget Sound. There are other beds in the Coast ranges of western
Oregon, and a few small ones in the Coast ranges of California.
The great interior region between the Rocky Mountains and the Coast
ranges has very little coal. The people of California have to import
large quantities of coal. Some is brought by the railroads from the
Rocky Mountain region, but the most comes by ships from various
parts of the world, from England, Australia, or British Columbia.
The ships bring the coal at low rates and take away grain and lumber.</p>
<p class="indent">
Coal is almost the only important mineral which Nature has bestowed
sparingly upon the Pacific slope. In California, however, she has made
amends by storing up large quantities of petroleum. In Pennsylvania
and Ohio there is petroleum as well as coal. Oil has also been
discovered in the Rocky Mountain region and in Texas.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 515px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig_109.jpg" width-obs="515" height-obs="338" alt="Fig. 109">
FIG. 109.—A SPRING OF WATER AND PETROLEUM
<p class="imgnote">The black streak is petroleum</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
Petroleum is found flowing from the rocks in the form of springs,
either by itself or associated with gases and strong-smelling mineral
water. The oil is usually obtained by boring wells, but in southern
California there is one mountain range which furnishes large quantities
through tunnels which have been run into its side. Petroleum is
commonly found in porous sandstones or shales, from one or two
hundred to three thousand feet below the surface. It was not made
in these rocks, but has soaked into them just as water soaks into
a brick. The rocks which produced the oil or petroleum are dark,
strong-smelling shales or limestone. Heat a piece of such rock,
and you will drive out a little oil.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig_110.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="374" alt="Fig. 110">
FIG. 110.—OIL WELLS IN THE CITY OF LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
<p class="imgnote">Pool of oil in foreground</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
Examine a piece of the shale from one of the oil districts of
California, and you will discover that it is a very peculiar rock,
for it is made up almost wholly of minute organisms which once
inhabited the ocean. Among the forms which you will find are the
silicious skeletons of diatoms, the calcareous skeletons of
foraminifera, scales of fish, and, rarely, the whole skeleton of
a fish.</p>
<p class="indent">
Where now there are mountains and valleys dotted with oil derricks,
there was once the water of the open ocean. This water was filled, as
the water of the ocean is to-day, with an infinite number of living
things. As these creatures died, their bodies sank to the bottom, and
while the soft parts dissolved, the hard parts or skeletons remained.
Through perhaps hundreds of thousands of years, the skeletons continued
to accumulate until beds were formed hundreds or even thousands
of feet in thickness. The materials of the beds, at first a soft
mass like the ooze which the dredger brings up from the bottom
of the present ocean, became packed together in a solid mass.</p>
<p class="indent">
Then disturbances affected this old sea bottom. It was raised, and
gravel, clay, and sand from some new shore were washed over the
bed of animal remains, burying it deeply. Continued movements of
the earth finally folded these rocks, which, as they were, squeezed
and broken, became warm. The heat and pressure started chemical
action in the decayed animal bodies, and particles of organic matter
were driven off in the form of oil and gas. These substances were
forced here and there through the fissures in the rocks. Part of
the products found a way to the surface and formed springs, while
other portions collected to form vast reservoirs in such porous
rocks as sandstone. The sulphur and mineral springs which occur
in oil regions tell us that this work of oil-making is still going
on.</p>
<p class="indent">
The oil as it comes from the ground is usually brownish or greenish
in color, and much thicker than the refined product which we use
in our lamps. Some of the crude petroleum is thick and tar-like
in appearance, and when long exposed to the air turns to a solid
black mass called "asphaltum." This, when softened by heat and
mixed with sand, makes a valuable material for street pavement.</p>
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