coal balls

An Example of the Origin of CoalBalls ScienceDirect

An Example of the Origin of CoalBalls ScienceDirect

The coalball discovery helps fill a stratigraphic gap in coalball occurrences in the upper Carboniferous (Bolsovian) of Euramerica. The autochthonous and hypautochthonous coalballs have a similar mineralogical composition and are composed of siderite (81100%), dolomiteankerite (019%), minor quartz and illite, and trace amounts of ...

Coal ball Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coal ball Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Coal ball is a permineralised life form that is full of calcium, magnesium and occasionally iron sulfide. They generally have a round shape. Coal balls are not made of coal, even though they have the name "coal ball". In 1855, two English scientists, Joseph Dalton Hooker and Edward William Binney, found coal balls in England.

Herrin Coal Member ILSTRAT University of Illinois UrbanaChampaign

Herrin Coal Member ILSTRAT University of Illinois UrbanaChampaign

Coal balls (mineralized peat) are common wherever marine rocks overlie the Herrin. They are generally composed of limestone partly replaced by pyrite. Isolated coal balls mostly are found near the top of the member. Large masses of coal balls up to 100 ft (30 m) across and replacing the entire height of the coal have been encountered in several ...

Formation and distribution of coal balls in the Herrin Coal ...

Formation and distribution of coal balls in the Herrin Coal ...

Large areas of concentrated coal balls (permineralized peat) up to 4 m thick obstructed longwall mining in the Herrin Coal at the Old Ben No. 24 mine. The largest coal‐ball area mapped contained >1500 m3; several areas contained >400 m3 of coal balls. In‐mine mapping established that there were two types of roof (freshwater and marine), and that the coal balls were spatially correlated ...

Phillips Coal Ball Collection PRI Center for Paleontology

Phillips Coal Ball Collection PRI Center for Paleontology

Coal balls are petrified pockets of plant debris that were preserved 280 million to 325 million years ago during the Upper Carboniferous Period, sometimes called the Great Coal Age. Plants immortalized in these coal balls are preserved at the cellular level, details not preserved in other types of fossils.

It is not my intention to present him as the leading botanist of his ...

It is not my intention to present him as the leading botanist of his ...

of coal balls selected from Stopes and Watson's study and a single analysis for an American coal ball presented by Darrah. Perhaps the most significant point is the great variation in the percentages of carbonates, pyrites and organic matter, and these published analyses by no means give the extremes. I have seen coal balls

Lab III Preservation (2) University of California Museum of ...

Lab III Preservation (2) University of California Museum of ...

Upon oxidization, most of the structures are lost. This is called "pyrite disease" in fossils and is characterized by a moldlike appearance on the cut surface of the coal ball. To prevent destruction, the surface can be coated with a sealant. Coal balls can also be stored in an lowoxygen medium like glycerin or antifreeze.

Petrified Lepidophloios Specimens from Iowa Coal Balls

Petrified Lepidophloios Specimens from Iowa Coal Balls

cium cal.'borrate and pyrite, commonly referred to as "coal balls." In central Iowa such coal balls frequently occur in the coal seams of the Des Moines Series, Cherokee Group, of Middle Pennsylvanian age (Landis, 1965). Although the occurrence of petrified Lepidophloios speci­ mens in Iowa coal balls has previously been noted by An­ drews

Concretions Fossil Collectors Prehistoric Life

Concretions Fossil Collectors Prehistoric Life

COAL BALLS. Coal balls can be considered concretions, as they are rounded masses of a mineral different from the surrounding rock and deposited before consolidation of the host rock, which is coal. The compost of Coal Age forests settled in the swamps, and calcium carbonate infiltrated masses of matted vegetation, forming the coal balls.

Carbonate petrology and geochemistry of Pennsylvanian coal balls from ...

Carbonate petrology and geochemistry of Pennsylvanian coal balls from ...

1. Introduction. Over 100 years have passed since Stopes and Watson (1909) proposed a marine origin for coal balls, which are carbonate concretions that formed in peat and contain anatomically preserved plant material. Most coal balls occur in paleotropical coals of Pennsylvanian and early Permian age. Although calcium carbonate is the primary mineral, coal balls usually contain pyrite ...

The pedogenic formation of coal balls by CO2 degassing through the ...

The pedogenic formation of coal balls by CO2 degassing through the ...

Coal balls are calcium carbonate accumulations that permineralized peat in paleotropical PermoCarboniferous (∼320250 Ma) mires. The formation of coal balls has been debated for over a century yet a widely applicable model is lacking. Two observations have been particularly challenging to explain: 1) the narrow temporal occurrence of coal balls and 2) their typical elemental (high Mg) and ...

Hill Top Colliery Wikipedia

Hill Top Colliery Wikipedia

Coal balls. In Lancashire, especially in the Burnley area, peat concretions are known as coal balls or colloquially as Burnley bobbers. They are particularly common in the seams of the Upper Foot Mine and Lower Mountain Mine in East Lancashire but also in the mines in Todmorden Moor on the eastern edge of this coal field. Due to their hardness ...

On the Present Distribution and Origin of the Calcareous Concretions in ...

On the Present Distribution and Origin of the Calcareous Concretions in ...

DOI: / Corpus ID: ; On the Present Distribution and Origin of the Calcareous Concretions in Coal Seams, Known as "Coal Balls" article{StopesOnTP, title={On the Present Distribution and Origin of the Calcareous Concretions in Coal Seams, Known as "Coal Balls"}, author={Marie Charlotte Carmichael Stopes and David Meredith Seares Watson}, journal={Philosophical ...

Daldinia concentrica: Cramp Balls Identification, Look Alikes Edibility

Daldinia concentrica: Cramp Balls Identification, Look Alikes Edibility

Identification and Description[iv] Daldinia concentrica is a relatively easy to identify mushroom that resembles hard, roundish lumps of coal stuck to the surface of decaying deadwood. Furthermore, unlike most other mushrooms, D. concentrica does not possess a cap, gills, pores, or even a stem. Instead, this species has a fruitbody composed of ...

Mineralogy and elemental geochemistry of pyrite coalballs, Datong ...

Mineralogy and elemental geochemistry of pyrite coalballs, Datong ...

Coalballs are nodulelike rocks native to coal seams that contain mineralized plant organs or tissues (Zodrow et al., 1996), and are used for studies on coalforming plant species, structural morphology, and coalforming environments (Hilton et al., 2001, Wang et al., 2002, Zhou et al., 2004 ).

Coal ball Facts for Kids

Coal ball Facts for Kids

A coal ball is a type of concretion, varying in shape from an imperfect sphere to a flatlying, irregular slab. Coal balls were formed in Carboniferous Period swamps and mires, when peat was prevented from being turned into coal by the high amount of calcite surrounding the peat; the calcite caused it to be turned into stone instead. As such, despite not actually being made of coal, the coal ...

Coal ball Wikiwand

Coal ball Wikiwand

A coal ball is a type of concretion, varying in shape from an imperfect sphere to a flatlying, irregular slab. Coal balls were formed in Carboniferous Period swamps and mires, when peat was prevented from being turned into coal by the high amount of calcite surrounding the peat; the calcite caused it to be turned into stone instead.

Are coal balls rare? A cyclostratigraphic analysis of coalball ...

Are coal balls rare? A cyclostratigraphic analysis of coalball ...

From the perspective of Phanerozoic time, coal balls are rare, apparently limited to a 24 interval (323299 Ma) in the Pennsylvanian and earliest within this interval, coal balls occur in many coals. Approximately 82 transgressiveregressive sedimentary cycles have been described for the Midcontinent, Illinois and Appalachian basins of North America during the midtolate ...

PDF Tom L. Phillips National Academy of Sciences

PDF Tom L. Phillips National Academy of Sciences

The coal balls saved, therefore, represent only a fraction of the actual processing activity of the lab. The peels, like the coal balls themselves, were, and still are as of this writing, systematically organized, housed, and labeled. Inventing CoalBall Paleoecology Fieldwork is the unseen part of coalball studies, and collecting

Coal balls Definition Meaning MerriamWebster

Coal balls Definition Meaning MerriamWebster

The meaning of COAL BALL is a nodule found in coal usually composed of calcite or silica and carbonaceous matter and having fragmentary or microscopic plant remains.

Modern analogs reveal the origin of Carboniferous coal balls

Modern analogs reveal the origin of Carboniferous coal balls

Coal balls were calcareous Histosols (peats), currently rare, and of two microbiome types. • Holocene calcareous peats in Eight Mile Creek, South Australia, were aerobic respirogenic. • Respirogenic coal balls have correlated calcite δ 18 O and δ 13 C like those of desert soils. •

The paleoecology of a coalball deposit from the middle Pennsylvanian ...

The paleoecology of a coalball deposit from the middle Pennsylvanian ...

The ratio of shoot debris to root debris within Urbandale coalball peats suggests that most of this deposit formed in a freshwater swamp. However, coalball peats with extremely low shootroot ratios (no shoots to ) also occur in the Urbandale deposit. These are dominated by cordaitalean roots and may have formed in saltwater swamps.

Coal ball Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

Coal ball Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

A coal ball is a type of concretion, varying in shape from an imperfect sphere to a flatlying, irregular slab. Coal balls were formed in Carboniferous Period swamps and mires, when peat was prevented from being turned into coal by the high amount of calcite surrounding the peat; the calcite caused it to be turned into stone instead.

The formation and significance of Carboniferous coal balls ...

The formation and significance of Carboniferous coal balls ...

Coal balls (exceptionally preserved calcareous permineralized peat), widely described from tropical Carboniferous Euramerian coal seams, have yielded diverse data on the biology, ontogeny and ecology of swamp plants and ecosystems. Probably over 75% of the swamp taxa may have been preserved, in contrast to probably less then 10% in other ...

Coalball floras of the NamurianWestphalian of Europe

Coalball floras of the NamurianWestphalian of Europe

As a result, the coalball floras of the Westphalian AB from Europe document a short span of time (less than 5 millions years). These floras correspond to the maximum domi nance of lycopod trees with up to 96% of peat biomass (Phillips and Peppers, 1984). An interes ting exception is the new assemblage described from Spain where ...

Coal Balls Pennsylvanian Coal

Coal Balls Pennsylvanian Coal

Coal Balls. Millions of years ago, in the interval of geologic time called the Pennsylvanian, the presentday coal seams of the Midwest were layers of peatbeds of water soaked and somewhat rotted plant debris accumulated in thickly forested swamps. Deep burial by layers of sediments during a vast span of time changed almost all the peat into ...

The Formation and Significance of Carboniferous Coal Balls JSTOR

The Formation and Significance of Carboniferous Coal Balls JSTOR

[Plate 1] Coal balls (exceptionally preserved calcareous permineralized peat), widely described from tropical Carboniferous Euramerian coal seams, have yielded diverse data on the biology, ontogeny and ecology of swamp plants and ecosystems. Probably over 75 %/ of the swamp taxa may have been preserved, in contrast to probably less then 10 %

دریافت اطلاعات بیشتر