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Saturday, December 20, 2008

Using GPS Data To Geotag Photos: The Basics

Using Picasa, PicasaWeb or iTag to geotag your photos through Google Earth (or Google Maps) is fine for the occasional photo, or for photos from the past where you don’t have specific location data, i.e. latitude and longitude. But if you’re going to be geotagging a lot of photos in the future, doing it manually will turn into a chore very quickly. There’s a way to simplify that task: Take location data from a GPS unit, and then embed it into your photo’s EXIF header or IPTC tags with software that automates the process. There are a lot of free and cheap programs that let you do that, and I’ll be covering many of the Windows options in upcoming posts. First, though, I want to go over some of the basics of equipment and data.

Equipment: Some day, most cameras may come with GPS capabilities built-in, so that they can automatically geotag your photos as you take them. But I’ve heard of only two cameras with built-in GPS released to date: the Navman iCN750 (discontinued), and the Ricoh Pro G3 GPS Camera, a two-year-old 3-megapixel model. So for now, the only reasonable choice is to use a handheld GPS receiver that can log your position continuously as a function of time, save that data, and then upload it to your computer (typically in GPX format).

Most handheld GPS units can do all of this, with the cheapest units running less than a hundred dollars. If you don’t need a large, handheld GPS receiver with all its features (data screen, input, maps, etc.), another option is to buy a simple GPS datalogger, like the Sony GPSCS1KA or Sony GPS-CS1units. Both Sony units are described as being specifically designed for digital camera use, but any GPS datalogger capable of saving data in GPX format will work just as well (do a Google search for GPS data logger). You won’t save that much money buying a datalogger instead of a basic handheld GPS unit, but they are often much smaller in size and weight, and can have longer battery lives and store more data than handheld units.

Data: You need to have both position and time data stored by the GPS units in order to geotag the photos,. The position data is obviously needed for the geotagging, but the time data plays a critical part as well. The software programs that I’ll be posting about match up the time you take your photo with the location the GPS data says you were at for that time, and then embed that time-specific location data in the photographs. Dataloggers will normally save both the location and time together automatically, but handheld GPS units may require you to specify that both time and position data be recorded in a GPS tracklog. Handheld units often let you specify whether your position is recorded continuously based on distance, time, or some combination of the two.

There’s another catch: some GPS units (like my Garmin) strip out the time data if you save the track in a separate tracklog, separate from the active track. So if you save a track in these units, make sure you don’t clear out the active track as well, or else you’ll have no way to synchronize your position with the time you took a photo. Found this out rather annoyingly after having taken a whole bunch of photos, saving the track, and then discovering that all the time data was gone. The newer Garmin x-series models let you log time and position data continuously to a GPX file on their microSD memory cards, bypassing the need to manage track data completely (and letting you record literally months worth of position and time data on a single microSD card).

You should also check to make sure that your camera is set to the same time as your GPS unit; if the camera’s time is off, or in a different time zone, that can complicate the process of matching up the GPS track time with the time the photo was taken. Many programs come with the ability to adjust for such a time difference, but it will make life a lot easier if you make sure they’re in time synch right from the start. GPS track times are recorded in UTC (aka Greenwich Mean Time), and while most programs can correct for the difference, some have problems with that correction.

Uploading the data to your computer from your GPS is usually straightforward; if the software that came with your GPS can’t take track data and save it in GPX format, a free program like EasyGPS or GPS TrackMaker does a great job.

Summing up: to automate geotagging your photos with GPS, you’ll need a GPS receiver that can log both your position and time on a continuous basis, and then upload the data to your computer in GPX format, where it can be synchronized with your photos based on time
Other posts in the Photo GeoTagging series, find here
Source: http://freegeographytools.com

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Coal-to-gas: part of a low-emissions future?

Its proponents say that underground coal gasification combined with carbon capture could allow the continued use of coal — without unacceptable emissions. Kurt Kleiner looks at whether the technology is likely to live up to expectations.
IAN BRITTON
Early next year a small Canadian company plans to start producing fuel by gasifying underground coal and extracting the combustible gas out of a well. It's an old trick with a new twist — the company will remove half of the carbon dioxide from the gas, creating a fuel that it says will be cheaper and cleaner than natural gas.
Laurus Energy of Montreal is one of a handful of companies around the world now exploring the technology, called underground coal gasification (UCG). Proponents claim that when UCG is combined with carbon capture and sequestration, it is potentially the most efficient and cost-effective way to use the world's vast coal reserves without emitting unacceptable amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.
"It's an extremely attractive technology both from an economic standpoint and a carbon management standpoint," says Julio Friedmann, a geologist and the head of the carbon management program at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
Though there are no operational sites with both technologies yet, combined they could meet the twin grand challenges of reducing dependency on foreign oil and slashing greenhouse gas emissions, said scientists at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting held February 14–18 in Boston.

More........ look: http://www.nature.com


Friday, November 21, 2008

Coal: Power of the future despite looking black now

The Indonesian stock market was one of the worst performing markets in the Asian region with a drop of well over 50 percent from the beginning of 2008. 

Commodities are among the worst-hit sectors caused by the sharp plunge in crude oil & commodity prices as mounting evidence indicates that the global financial crisis may hurt world economies, consumer demand and corporate earnings. 

Coal mining company Bumi Resources plunged 81 percent during this period while other coal mining companies fell by between 48 percent and 54 percent. The main reason for the sharp drop in coal stocks is that coal prices fell about 46 percent from their peak of US$192 per ton in July 2008 to $103 currently. 

The bigger fall in the Bumi share price, relative to other coal stocks, was partly due to a drop in investor confidence following the suspension of trading in its shares on the stock market, as its shareholder Bakrie and Brothers negotiated the sale of its 35 percent stake in Bumi. 

Although coal stocks seem to be stuck in the treacherous doldrums, I believe that this situation is unlikely to persist for long as the business outlook for Indonesian coal remains good. There are several strong reasons why the prospects for the coal business remains excellent. 

Coal is currently widely used all over the world for power generation, steel production, cement manufacturing and other industrial processes. Coal fuels about 40 percent of the world's current electricity requirements and this important role is expected to continue in the foreseeable future. 

The biggest market for coal is Asia which is right on the doorstep of Indonesia. Asia accounted for about 60 percent of global coal consumption in 2007, but this is expected to increase further to 64 percent by 2010. With vast coal resources, Indonesia has become the world's largest exporter of thermal coal. 

Despite fears of carbon pollution in many developed countries, I expect coal to remain a major source of energy rivaling other sources of energy for purely economic reasons. Coal use should increase under any foreseeable scenario because it is simply the cheapest and most abundant source of energy. 

It is estimated coal can provide energy at the significantly cheaper cost of between $1-2 per million British thermal units (mmbtu) compared to $6-12 per mmbtu for oil and natural gas. 

Coal is the largest source of energy in Asia accounting for 50 percent of total fuel consumption of 9 billion tons of oil equivalent. 

More important is that coal is a sustainable source of energy for consumption as global coal reserves are about 847 billion tons, which would be sufficient to meet global consumption for the next 133 years, or at least for the next four to five generations. 

In Indonesia, we have huge coal resources of 93 billion tons mainly located in Sumatra and Kalimantan. Fortunately, most Indonesian coal produces lower emissions of sulphur and nitrogen oxides, as well as lower production of waste. The implication for users is that this would reduce equipment maintenance and ash disposal costs. 

Coal demand from the U.S. and Europe have imposed more stringent regulations restricting power plants from using coal with high sulphur content which is favorable to Indonesian coal producers. 

Another positive point is that most coal mining companies in Indonesia adopt the open-cast mining method as the coal seams are relatively close to the surface. This makes Indonesian coal mining one of the lowest cost coal production industries in the world. 

On the domestic front, coal production is expected to increase in the future to meet rising demands from power plants here. The government plans to convert 7,753 megawatts (MW) of diesel-fired power plants into coal-fired plants and is building an additional 10,000 MW of new coal-fired capacity by 2009 to 2010. 

A major deterrent for foreign investors into the coal sector in Indonesia is legal risks. The uncertain regulatory and legal environment is one of the main reasons for Indonesia having lower proven coal reserves despite being the world's largest exporter. 

Inevitably, investors are reluctant to commit significant investment for exploration of coal resources. 

If the problems are inadequately addressed and managed by the government, Indonesia may end up becoming a net coal importer in the future despite its vast resources, like the current appalling state of the domestic oil industry. 

The coal mining business is regulated by a broad spectrum of the government which include the Ministry of Energy & Mineral Resources, Ministry of Environment, the Investment Coordinating Board, Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Communication and Regional Governments in the respective mining locations. 

There are different laws and regulations applied by these various government departments that can control different aspects of coal mining activities. Cost of full compliance to all the complex regulations can have a significant impact on mining operations and profitability. 

If the problems are properly managed, coal mining can be an extremely lucrative business. 

Indonesian coal mining conmpanies are currently facing some serious challenges in the short term. Equity investors with a longer term investment horizon should find the coal sector very attractive at its current distressed valuation.
David Chang , Analyst

CSR programs in East Kutai 'ineffective' in helping environment

Seventy percent of the forest area in Kutai National Park in Sangatta, East Kutai, East Kalimantan, has been destroyed due to unregulated conversion projects, mining operations and illegal deforestation. 

The rate of deforestation has increased in the region, also largely owing to preparations for the construction of the Bontang-Sangatta highway, which will cut through the area. 

It is crucial that other parties share the burden of protecting the forest area with Kutai National Park, including the surrounding community, the regional government, research and education institutions and the private sector. 

Stakeholders in the area, including contractors, should increase their efforts to support the environment. 

However, some stakeholders have come under fire for running ineffective programs

A scientist at the Center for International Forestry Research (Cifor), Moira Moeliono, said the companies should be doing more during a recent seminar themed "Not only for Profit" held in Sangatta. 

"The Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programs initiated by a number of companies are not effective, or do not support the preservation of a conservation area. CSR programs are just a step to redeem sins committed by the companies," Moira said. 

She said there was a lack of supervision of and evaluation on the weaknesses of the CSR programs to find ways to improve them. 

Areas surrounding Kutai National Park are being operated by a number of forest concession holders, and coal mining, gas and fertilizer companies under a partnership called Mitra Kutai. 

Companies included in the grouping are PT Kaltim Prima Coal (KPC), PT Pupuk Kaltim, PT Badak NGL, PT Banpu Indominco Mandiri, PT Surya Hutani Jaya and PT Pertamina EP-KTI. 

It is likely the companies' operations will increase the already rapid rate of destruction of the conservation area. 

"Sometimes activities carried out by the companies are not in line with forest preservation efforts, such as Pertamina which has opened a well within the park. Isn't this the same as providing access for further deforestation," Moira said. 

"That's why we organized a regency-level symposium in East Kutai this year to ensure that company development projects benefit their surroundings so they would not only think about profits in a particular development program." 

PT Kaltim Prima Coal Conservation and Agribusiness Development superintendent Nurul Karim said the presence of parties destroying forests in the area could not be ignored. 

Kutai National Park should have been protected, he said, but instead it was sold as plots by a number of dishonest individuals from the community and the companies. 

"We don't deny that some workers are involved in the process of forest destruction, because around 2,800 workers work for KPC. The company cannot monitor or control the activities of each of its workers," Nurul said. 

Kutai National Park is spread over three regencies -- East Kutai, Bontang and Kutai Kartanegara -- and spans 198,629 hectares. Some 70 percent of its forests have been destroyed, also in large part due to plantation conversion projects, and the establishment of sawmills and furniture enterprises in the region. 

Cifor chose Kutai National Park as the subject of a research on deforestation it began in January, 2007.

Nurni Sulaiman , The Jakarta Post , Sangatta

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Glossary mining glold terms

Accident : an undesired event that results in harm to people, damage to property, loss to process, or harm to the environment
activated carbon : chemically treated and heated carbon which has the ability to absorb gold
alteration : the physical or chemical change in the composition of rock
arsenopyrite :iron arsenic sulphide, FeAsS
backfill :waste rock or tailings used to fill mined out areas, particularly underground
basalt :dark colored, fine-grained volcanic igneous rock
base metal :non-ferrous metals inferior in value to precious metals; i.e. copper lead, zinc, nickel
bedrock :solid rock beneath superficial soil cover and unconsolidated sediments
belt :an exposed zone or band of a particular kind of rock
bioxidation :the oxidation of elements caused by naturally occurring bio-organisms in rock. Bioxidation is used in the recovery of gold from sulhpide rock by providing the optimum temperature, acidity (pH) and oxygen levels for the natural oxidation process to work most effectively
breccia : rock consisting of angular fragments in a finer-grained matrix
bullion : the product of smelting or refining precious metals, usually in the form of bars or ingots
by-product : revenue, net of transportation, refining and treatment charges, from the sale of metals derived in conjunction with the production of the primary mine metal
carbon-in-leach (CIL) :a process to recover dissolved gold onto activated carbon, by introducing activated carbon into a gold-cyanide slurry during the agitation process and subsequently separating the loaded carbon from the slurry for the removal of the gold
carbon-in-pulp (CIP) :a process to recover dissolved gold onto activated carbon, by introducing activated carbon into the system after the gold has been dissolved by the cyanide solution and subsequently separating the loaded carbon from the slurry for the removal of the gold
cash cost :includes production costs, royalties, marketing and refining charges, together with all administration expenses at the operating level

chlorite : platey iron-magnesium silicate, typically formed during alteration by other minerals at low temperatures
cut-and-fill : a mining method which removes ore in horizontal slices and the remaining void is filled with waste rock before proceeding to mine the next slice of ore
cut-off grade : the lowest grade of mineralized material considered to be economic and used to calculate the ore reserve in a deposit
cyanide-leaching : dissolving gold or silver in a weak solution of sodium cyanide or potassium cyanide
dip : the angle of incline from horizontal of a planar feature, such as an orebody
disseminated ore : ore bearing small particles of valuable minerals spread throughout the rock
dolerite : intrusive dyke rock made up mostly of feldspar and pyroxene
doré : unrefined gold and silver bars usually containing more than 90 percent precious metal
drift-and-fill : an underground mining method whereby ore is mined by drifting along the mineralization and backfilling the void so that the next level can be mined
dyke : an igneous intrusion which cuts across the bedding of other planar structures in the country rock
erosion : the alteration, loosening and removal of land surface material by the actions of running water and wind
exposure hours : the total number of hours worked at the operation
extrusive : igneous rock which has been erupted to the surface by volcanic activity
facies : distinctive rock type
fatality : death of an individual as a result of a work related accident or illness
fault : a break in the sub-surface strata where there is displacement relative to the original position of strata
feasibility study : a comprehensive study undertaken to determine the economic feasibility of a project; the conclusion will determine if a production decision can be made and is used for financing arrangements
first aid : all work related injury or illness that does not require medical attention
flotation : a process by which some mineral particles are induced, by the introduction of specific reagents, to become attached to bubbles and float while other particles sink; the valuable minerals are concentrated and separated from the gaunge
fold :a bend in rock strata
formation : a unit of geological mapping, consisting of a large and persistent stratum of rock
gabbro : coarse-grained igneous rock containing minor silica
gold equivalent: gold plus silver expressed in equivalent ounces of gold using a conversion ratio dependent on prevailing gold and silver prices
grade : the amount of valuable material in a specific volume of rock; typically expressed as grams per tonne for precious metals and as a percentage for base metals
granophyric : an igneous texture characterized by irregular intergrowths of quartz and feldspar
gravity separation : recovery of gold from crushed rock using gold's high specific gravity to separate it from lighter material
greenstone : metamorphosed mafic igneous rock which is typically green due to content of chlorite, actinolite, etc.
headframe : the framework building at the top of the shaft which houses the hoisting mechanisms
hedging : the effective offsetting of a price or exchange risk inherent in another transaction or arrangement
host rock : the rock containing minerals; eg an orebody
hydrometallurgy : the selective dissolution of metals from ore to concentrates
hydrothermal : pertaining to heated water which transports minerals in solution
incident : an undesired event which under slightly different circumstances could result in harm to people, damage to property, loss to process, or harm to the environment
ISO 9000 : international standards for organizations to implement quality management systems and quality assurance programs
ISO 14000 : international standards for organizations to implement sound environmental management systems
infill drilling : drilling between previously drilled holes to provide additional geological information to more accurately define mineralization
lag : coarse gravel material remaining behind when finer material has been eroded away
lava : molten magma extruded from volcanic vent lode
lost time injury (LTI) : the number of lost time injuries multiplied by 200,000 and divided by the total number of exposure hours

lost time injury incident rate (LTA) : all work related injuries or illnesses where the employee cannot work the next regular scheduled shift
mafic : igneous rock with dark coloration due to high magnesium and iron content
medical injury : any injury that requires treatment by a licensed medical professional that does not result in lost time or restricted duty but is beyond first aid
Merrill-Crowe : a precipitation process to recover precious metals from a cyanide solution using zinc dust
metasediments : metamorphosed sedimentary rocks
metasomatism : the process by which one mineral is replaced by another
mill : the plant for grinding ore to a fine powder and extracting the economic metals by physical and/or chemical means
mineralized zone : host rock in which minerals of potential commercial value occur

net smelter return (NSR) : a share of the net revenue generated from the sale of metal produced by the mine
open pit : a mine on the surface
ore : a mixture of minerals, host rock and waste rock which is expected to be profitably mined
ounces L weight of gold with a fineness of 999.9 parts per 1,000; 1 Troy ounce is equal to 31.1034 grams
outcrop : part of a geological formation or structure that appears at the surface of the earth
oxidation : chemical reaction between any substance and oxygen
oxide ore : mineralized rock in which the minerals have been partially or wholly oxidized by weathering processes
porphyry : igneous rocks containing large crystals in a fine-grained groundmass
pressure oxidation : an oxidation process which uses high temperature and pressure to convert refractory sulphide mineralization into amenable oxide ore
process loss : any unplanned interruption or downgrading of operating processes resulting from an accident, abuse, negligence, or act of God
production cost: cash cost plus depreciation, amortization and reclamation
property damage : damage occurring to property through an accident, abuse, negligence, or act of God
pyrite : an iron sulphide, FeS
pyrrhotite : an iron sulphide, FeS
raise : a vertical or upward inclined drive to connect underground mine levels or to the surface
reagent : a chemical used in the mineral recovery process
reclamation : the rehabilitation to beneficial use of land disturbed by mining activity
refractory ore : gold mineralization encapsulated in silica or sulphide, which is not amenable to cyanide leaching methods
reserve : that part of a resource that can be profitably mined under current or specified economic conditions. A reserve estimate must consider all technical, operating, legal and financial factors
reserve - proven : the estimated quantity and grade of part of a measured resource for which all consideration factors establish the highest degree of confidence in the estimate
reserve – probable : the estimated quantity and grade of part of a indicated resource for which all consideration factors establish a confidence level for positive decisions on major expenditures
resource : the grade and quantity estimate of a mineralized deposit that indicates mining is currently or potentially profitable under economic and operating conditions
resource - measured : the estimated grade and quantity for that part of a deposit configuration which has been very well established by observation, sampling, drilling trenches and mine workings
resource - indicated : the estimated grade and quantity for that part of a deposit for which grade continuity, shape and extent has been established for reliable grade and tonnage estimation
resource – inferred : the estimated grade and quantity determined from limited sampling but sufficient geological information and understanding to outline a deposit of potential economic merit
restricted duty injury : all work related injuries or illnesses that result in the employee not being able to perform 100% of normal duties, whether scheduled to or not
room-and-pillar : mining method used for flat-lying deposits where the ore is removed in chambers or rooms leaving pillars for support
schist : fine-grained metamorphic rock with laminations similar to slate
severity measure: the number of days lost, plus the number of days of restricted duty, multiplied by 200,000 and divided by the number of exposure hours
shaft :a vertical passage in an underground mine used for transporting personnel, equipment, supplies and mined material
silicic alteration : replacement of silica
spot price :current price of gold or other commodity traded in the immediate market
stockwork : a 3-dimensional network of veins or veinlets
stope :the working area from which ore is extracted in an underground mine
strike :the direction or bearing of a mineralized vein or rock formation
stripping ratio :the ratio of the amount of waste rock removed per tonne of ore mined
sulfide :a mineral compound characterized by the linkage of sulfur with metal or semimetal; eg galena, PbS, or pyrite, FeS2
syncline :a fold of strata forming an inverted arch
tailings :material rejected from a treatment plant after the valuable minerals have been recovered
telluride: a mineral characterized by the linkage of metal with tellurium
tholeiitic :basaltic magma containing little or no olivine
total days lost :the total number of days an employee was scheduled to work but was unable to as a result of a work related injury or illness
total days restricted :the total number of days an employee cannot do any of a part of normal work activities but does not result in lost time
total reportable injury incident rate :the number of medical injuries, plus the number of restricted duty injuries, plus the number of lost time injuries, plus the number of fatalities, multiplied by 200,000 and divided by the total number of exposure hours
tuff :strata of volcanic ash
turbidite :a marine clastic sediment deposited by sea bed currents laden with suspended material
ultrabasic :igneous rock with very low silica content
wall rock : the rock mass adjacent to a fault, fault zone or lode
weathered zone : near surface zone in which the exposed rock has been chemically or physically changed due to the action of rain, water, etc.
Source: http://www.newmont.com/

glossary mining mineral terms

Abandoned Mine - Excavations, either caved or sealed, that are deserted and in which further mining is not intended.
Acid Mine Drainage - Liquid drainage from bituminous coal mines containing a high concentration of acidic sulfates, especially ferrous sulfate.
Adit - A horizontal opening giving access to a mine.
Advance Stripping - The removal of barren or sub-grade earthy or rock materials required to expose and permit the minable grade of ore to be mined.
Air Shaft - A shaft used wholly or mainly for ventilating mines, for bringing fresh air to places where men are working, or for exhausting used air.
Airway - Any underground gallery or passage through which a portion of the ventilation passes, that is, the air is carried. Sometimes referred to as an air course. Also called wind road.
Anode - The positive terminal of an electrolytic cell. Opposite of cathode.
Anthracite - A hard, black lustrous coal containing a high percentage of fixed carbon and a low percentage of volatile matter. Commonly referred to as hard coal. Anthracite ignites with difficulty, produces no smoke, burns at first with a very short blue flame that disappears after the coal is thoroughly ignited, and produces an intensely hot fire.
Ash - The inorganic residue remaining after ignition of combustible substances. In general, it differs in weight and composition from the original mineral matter.
Auger Mining - A mining method often used by strip-mine operators when the overburden gets too thick to be removed economically. Large-diameter, spaced holes are drilled up to 200 feet into the coal bed by an auger. Like a bit used for boring holes in wood, this consists of a cutting head with screw like extensions. As the auger turns, the head breaks the coal and the screw carries the coal back into the open and dumps it on an elevating conveyor; this, in turn, carries the coal to an overhead bin or loads it directly into a truck. Auger mining is relatively inexpensive, and it is reported to recover 60 to 65 percent of the coal in the part of the bed where it is used
Backfill - The process of filling, and/or the material used to fill, a mine opening. In general refers to the material placed "back" to refill an excavation.
Ballast - Rough, unscreened gravel as used to form the bed of a railway or substratum for new roads.
Barren Solution - A solution from which all possible valuable constituents have been removed.
Bed - The smallest division of stratified layers marked by more or less well-defined divisional planes.
Belt Conveyors - A moving endless belt that rides on rollers and on which coal or other materials can be carried for various distances.

Belt Feeders - Short loop of conveyor belt, or articulated steel plate, used to draw ore at a regulated rate from under a bin or stockpile.

Belting - One of the main parts of a belt conveyor. The belting consists of plies of cotton duck impregnated with rubber, and with top and bottom covers of rubber. The carrying capacity of the belt will vary depending on the running speed and the width of the belt.
Bench - The horizontal step or floor along which coal, ore, stone, or overburden is worked or quarried. In tunnel excavation, where a top heading is driven, the bench is the mass of rock left, extending from about the spring line to the bottom of the tunnel.
Beneficiation - The processing of ores to regulate the size of a desired product, remove unwanted constituents, and improve the quality, purity, or assay grade of a desired product. Concentration or other preparation of ore for smelting by drying, flotation, or magnetic separation.
Bituminous Coal - A coal which is high in carbonaceous matter, having between 15 and 50 percent volatile matter. Also known as soft coal.
Blast - The operation of blasting, or rending rock or earth by means of explosives.
Block Coal - A bituminous coal that breaks into large lumps or cubical blocks; also, coal passing over certain sized screens instead of through them, such as a 5-, 6-, and 8-inch block.
Blower - A fan employed in forcing air either into a mine or into one portion of a mine.

Blunging - The wet process of blending, or suspending, ceramic material in liquid by agitation.
Bone Coal - Coal with a high ash content, almost rock.
Box Cut - In surface mining, the initial cut driven in a property, where no open side exists; this results in a high wall on both sides of the cut.
Brattice - A board of plank lining, or other partition, in any mine passage to confine the air and force it into the working places. Its object is to keep the intake air from finding its way by a short route into the return airway.
Brattice Cloth - Fire-resistant canvas or duck used to erect a brattice.
Briquet - A block of compressed coal dust, used as fuel; also, a slab or block of artificial stone.
British Thermal Unit (BTU) - The amount of heat needed to raise 1 pound of water 1 degree F (equal to 252 calories). Symbol, Btu.
Brown Coal - A low-rank coal which is brown, brownish-black, but rarely black. It commonly retains the structures of the original wood. It is high in moisture, low in heat value, and checks badly upon drying.
Bucket - A vessel (as a tub or scoop) for hoisting and conveying material (as coal, ore, grain, gravel, mud, or concrete). A part of an excavator that digs, lifts, and carries dirt.
Bug Dust - Fine coal or rock material resulting from dry boring, drilling, or the use of other cutting machines in underground work places.

Buggy - A small wagon or truck used for short transportation of heavy materials (as coal in a mine or ingots in a steel mill).
Bulldozer (Dozer) - A highly versatile piece of earth excavating and moving equipment especially useful in land clearing and leveling work, in stripping topsoil, in road building and ramp building and in floor or bench cleanup and gathering operations.
By-product - A secondary or additional product; for example, the more common byproducts of coal ovens are gas, tar, benzol, and ammonium sulfate.
Cap Lamp - The lamp which a miner wears on his safety hat or cap. For illumination only.
Captive Mine - A mine which produces coal or mineral for use by the same company.
Cathode - The electrode where electrons enter (current leaves) an operating system, such as a battery, an electrolytic cell, an X-ray tube, or a vacuum tube. Opposite of anode.
Cinder Blocks - A block closing the front of a blast furnace and containing the cinder notch.
Coal - A solid, brittle, more or less distinctly stratified, combustible carbonaceous rock, formed by partial to complete decomposition of vegetation; varies in color from dark brown to black; not fusible without decomposition and very insoluble. The boundary line between peat and coal is hazy (see brown coal) as is the boundary line between coal and graphite and the boundary line between carbonaceous rock and coal. In the formation of coal, the vegetable matter appears to have been very largely moss and other low forms of plants, but in places, coal contains much wood; the vegetal matter seems to have first taken the form of peat, then lignite, and then bituminous coal. The latter by the loss of its bitumen has in some places been converted into anthracite (hard coal) and finally into graphite.
Coal Fields - An area of country, the underlying rocks of which contain workable coal seams.
Coal Gas - Flammable gas derived from coal either naturally in place, or by induced methods of industrial plants and underground gasification.
Coal Seam - A bed or stratum of coal.
Coal Tar - Tar obtained by the destructive distillation of bituminous coal, usually in coke ovens or in retorts and consisting of numerous constituents (as benzene, xylenes, naphthalene, pyridine, quinoline, phenol, cresols, light oil, and creosote) that may be obtained by distillation.
Coke - Bituminous coal from which the volatile constituents have been driven off by heat, so that the fixed carbon and the ash are fused together.
Coke Breeze - The fine screenings from crushed coke or from coke as taken from the ovens, of a size varied in local practice but usually passing a ½-inch or 3/4-inch screen opening.

Colliery - A whole coal mining plant, generally used in connection with anthracite mining but sometimes used to designate the mine, shops, and preparation plant of a bituminous operation.
Concentration - The process of increasing the dissolved solids per unit volume of solution, usually by evaporation of the liquid; the quantity of solute dissolved in a unit volume of solution.
Continuous Mining - Mining in which the continuous mining machine cuts or rips coal from the face and loads it onto conveyors or into shuttle cars in a continuous operation. Thus, the drilling and shooting operations are eliminated, along with the necessity for working several headings in order to have available a heading in which loading can be in progress at all times. The longwall machine and conveyor are in the same track which is situated between the last row of props and the face. The conveyor is moved forward progressively as the coal is cut and loaded by the machine. There are no separate or cyclic operations as in conventional machine mining and the aim is to make each shift a continuation of the previous shift. Where the conditions are favorable, faces up to 250 yards in length may be so worked.

Conventional Mining - The cycle of operations which includes cutting the coal, drilling the shot holes, charging and shooting the holes, loading the broken coal, and installing roof support. Also known as cyclic mining.
Conveyor - A mechanical contrivance generally electrically driven, which extends from a receiving point to a discharge point and conveys, transports, or transfers material between those points.

Core Drill - A drilling machine equipped with a hollow bit (core bit) and a core barrel which by rotation cuts out and recovers a rock core sample. A drill that removes a cylindrical core from the drill hole.

Cropline - A line following the outcrop.

Crosscut - A small passageway driven at right angles to the main entry to connect it with a parallel entry or air course.

Crusher - A machine for crushing rock or other materials. Among the various types of crushers are the ball-mill, gyratory crusher, Hadsel mill, hammer mill, jaw crusher, rod mill, rolls, stamp mill, and tube mill.

Crushing - Reducing ore or quartz by stamps, crushers, or rolls.
Crystallization - The formation of mineral crystals during the cooling of a magma or by precipitation from a solution.

Cut - In development work, the term cut refers to the location and direction of holes blasted first to provide a free face to which other holes may break. For example, draw cut, horizontal cut, pyramid cut, burned cut, etc.

Cutting Machine - A power-driven machine used to undercut or shear the coal to facilitate its removal from the face.

Deep Mining - The exploitation of coal or mineral deposits at depths exceeding about 3,000 feet. Also known as underground mining.

Dragline - A type of excavating equipment which casts a rope-hung bucket a considerable distance, collects the dug material by pulling the bucket toward itself on the ground with a second rope, elevates the bucket, and dumps the material on a spoil bank, in a hopper, or on a pile.

Dredging - The removal of soils from under water, using the water as a means of transportation to convey the soils to final positions.

Drift - A horizontal underground passage. A drift follows the vein rather than intersect it like a crosscut.

Drill - Any cutting tool or form of apparatus using energy in any one of several forms to produce a circular hole in rock, metal, wood, or other material.

Duckbill - The name given to a shaking-type combination loading and conveying device, so named from the shape of its loading end and which generally receives its motion from the shaking conveyor to which it is attached.

Empties - Empty mine or railroad cars. Empty railroad cars are called "flats" in Arkansas.

Escapeway - An opening through which the miners may leave the mine if the ordinary exit is obstructed.

Exhaust Fan - A fan which sucks used air from a mine and thereby causes fresh air to enter by separate entries to repeat the cycle.
Face - A working place from which coal or mineral is extracted. The exposed surface of coal or other mineral deposit in the working place where mining, winning, or getting is proceeding.

Fault - A break in the continuity of a body of rock. It is accompanied by a movement on one side of the break or the other so that what were once parts of one continuous rock stratum or vein are now separated.

Fines - In general, the smallest particles of coal or mineral in any classification, process, or sample of the run-of-mine material.

Fire - To blast with gunpowder or other explosives. A word shouted by miners to warn one another when a shot is fired.

Fire Boss - A person designated to examine the mine for gas and other dangers. In certain states, the fire boss is designated as the mine examiner.

Floor - The rock underlying a stratified or nearly horizontal deposit, corresponding to the foot wall of more steeply dipping deposits. A horizontal, flat ore body.

Flotation - The method of mineral separation in which a froth created in water by a variety of reagents floats some finely crushed minerals to the surface and other minerals sink.

Fluidity (Plasticity) - In mineral transport, term not confined to liquids and slurries, but also used for finely divided solids which flow readily in air currents, fluosolids reactors, or through dry ball mills.

Freeze Dried Additives - Chemicals added to the coal to prevent freezing during shipping.

Front End Loader - A tractor loader with a digging bucket mounted and operated at the front end of the tractor. A tractor loader that both digs and dumps in front.
Gassy - A coal mine is rated gassy by the U.S. Bureau of Mines if an ignition occurs or if a methane content exceeding 0.25 percent can be detected, and work must be halted if the methane exceeds 1.5 percent in a return airway.

Gather - To assemble loaded cars from several production points and deliver them to main haulage for transport to the surface or pit bottom.

Gathering Locomotive - A lightweight type of electric locomotive used to haul loaded cars from the working places to the main haulage road, and to replace them with empties.

Gob - To store underground, as along one side of a working place, the rock and refuse encountered in mining. The material so packed or stored underground. The space left by the extraction of a coal seam into which waste is packed. Also called goaf.

Gob Pile - A pile or heap of mine refuse on the surface. An accumulation of waste material such as rock or bone.

Gross Ton - The long ton of 2,240 avoirdupois pounds.

Ground Water - Water at, and below, the water table; basal or bottom water; phreatic water. Used also in a broad sense to mean all water below the ground surface. Water derived from wells or springs, not surface water from lakes or streams.

Gunite - A mixture of sand and cement, sprayed with a pressure gun onto roofs and ribs to act as a sealing agent to prevent erosion by air and moisture.
Haulage - The drawing or conveying, in cars or otherwise, or movement of men, supplies, ore and waste both underground and on the surface.

Haulageway - The gangway, entry, or tunnel through which loaded or empty mine cars are hauled by animal or mechanical power.

Head House - A covered timber framing at the top of a shaft, into which the shaft guides are continued that carry the cage or elevator. The term is sometimes applied to the structure containing the hoisting engine, boilers, and other machinery, in addition to the actual hoisting cage, etc.

Heap Leaching - A process used for the recovery of copper from weathered ore and material from mine dumps. This process can also be applied to the sodium sulfide leaching of mercury ores.

Highwall - The unexcavated face of exposed overburden and coal or ore in an opencast mine or the face or bank on the uphill side of a contour strip mine excavation.

Hoist - A power-driven windlass for raising ore, rock or other material from a mine and for lowering or raising men and material. Also called hoister.
In Situ - In the natural or original position. Applied to a rock, soil, or fossil when occurring in the situation in which it was originally formed or deposited.
Jig - A machine in which the feed is stratified in water by means of a pulsating motion and from which the stratified products are separately removed, the pulsating motion being usually obtained by alternate upward and downward currents of the water. Also called washbox.
Kerf - Undercut in a coal seam from 3 to 7 inches thick and entering the face to a depth of up to 4 feet, made by a mechanical cutter. Also called kirve.
Lamp-House - A room or building at the surface of a mine, provided for charging, servicing, and issuing all cap, hand, and flame safety lamps held at the mine.

Layout - The design or pattern of the main roadway and workings.

Leaching - Extracting a soluble metallic compound from an ore by dissolving it in a solvent, such as water, sulfuric acid, etc. and then recovering the metal by precipitation.

Lignite - A brownish-black coal in which the alteration of vegetal material has proceeded further than in peat but not so far as subbituminous coal.

Liquid Oxygen Explosive (LOX) - Sawdust or other suitable material, formed into cartridges and dipped into liquid oxygen before use in blasting.

Loader - A mechanical shovel or other machine for loading coal, ore, mineral, or rock.

Loading Machine - A machine for loading materials such as coal, ore, or rock into cars or other means of conveyance for transportation to the surface of the mine.

Loading Ramp - A surface structure, often incorporating storage bins, used for gravity loading bulk material into transport vehicles.

Locomotive - An electric engine, either operating from current supplied from trolley and track or from storage batteries carried on the locomotive.

Longwall - The coal seam is removed in one operation by means of a long working face or wall, thus the name. The workings advance (or retreat) in a continuous line which may be several hundreds of yards in length. The space from which the coal has been removed (the gob, goaf, or waste) is either allowed to collapse (caving) or is completely or partially filled or stowed with stone and debris. The stowing material is obtained from any dirt in the seam and from the ripping operations on the roadways to gain height. Stowing material is sometimes brought down from the surface and packed by hand or by mechanical means.

Low Coal - Coal occurring in a thin seam or bed.

Lump Coal - Bituminous coal in the large lumps remaining after a single screening that is often designated by the size of the mesh over which it passes and by which the minimum size lump is determined. Also, the largest marketable size.
Man Car - A kind of car for transporting miners up and down the steeply inclined shafts of some mines, as at Lake Superior.

Man Trip - A trip made by mine cars and locomotives to take men rather than coal, to and from the working places.

Marsh Gas - Methane gas. If the decaying matter at the bottom of a marsh or pond is stirred, bubbles of methane rise to the surface, thus the name marsh gas.

Methane - Formed by the decomposition of organic matter, it is the most common gas found in coal mines. It is a tasteless, colorless, nonpoisonous, and odorless gas; in mines the presence of impurities may give it a peculiar smell.

Methane Monitor - A system whereby the methane content of the mine air is indicated automatically at all times, and when the content reaches a predetermined concentration the electric power is cut off automatically from each machine in the affected area. The mechanism is so devised that its setting cannot be altered. The system is used, mainly, in conjunction with the operation of continuous miners and power loaders.

Metric Ton - A unit of mass and weight that equals 1,000 kilograms or 2,204.6 avoirdupois pounds; abbreviation, MT.

Middlings - That part of the product of a washery, concentration, or preparation plant which is neither clean coal nor mineral nor reject (tailings). It consists of fragments of coal and shale or mineral and gangue. The material is often sent back for crushing and retreatment.

Mine Car - Cars which are loaded at production points and hauled to the pit bottom or surface in a train by locomotives or other power. They vary in capacity from 1 to 12 tons, and are either of wood or steel construction or combinations of both.

Mine Foreman - The person charged with the responsibility of the general supervision of the underground workings of a mine and the persons employed therein. In certain states, the mine foreman is designated as the mine manager.

Mine Inspector - One who checks mines to determine the safety condition of working areas, equipment, ventilation, and electricity, and to detect fire and dust hazards.

Miner - One who mines; as (1) one engaged in the business or occupation of getting ore, coal, precious substances, or other natural substances out of the earth; (2) a machine for automatic mining (as of coal); and (3) a worker on the construction of underground tunnels and shafts (as for roads, railways, waterways).

Mineral - In a broad nontechnical sense, the term embraces all inorganic and organic substances that are extracted from the earth for use by man. A substance occurring in nature which has a definite or characteristic range of chemical composition, and distinctive physical properties or molecular structure. With few exceptions, such as opal and mercury, minerals are crystalline solids.

Mineral Rights - The ownership of the minerals under a given surface, with the right to enter thereon, mine, and remove them. It may be separated from the surface ownership, but, if not so separated by distinct conveyance, the latter includes it.

Mine Run - The product of the mines before being sized and cleaned.

Mouth - An opening resembling or likened to a mouth, as one affording entrance or exit to a mine.

Muck - Unconsolidated soils, sand, clays, loams encountered in surface mining; generally, earth which can be severed and moved without preliminary blasting. Useless material; earth or rock which may or may not be mixed with coal or minerals.

Multiple-Seam Mining - Mining two or more seams of coal, frequently close together, that can be mined profitably where mining one alone would not be profitable.
Nonmetal - A chemical element that is not classed as a metal because it does not exhibit most of the typical metallic properties. An element that, in general, is characterized chemically by the ability to form anions, acidic oxides and acids, and stable compounds with hydrogen.
Open-Cut (Pit) Mining - A form of operation designed to extract minerals that lie near the surface. Waste, or overburden, is first removed, and the mineral is broken and loaded, as in a stone quarry. Important chiefly in the mining of ores of iron and copper. The mining of metalliferous ores by surface-mining methods is commonly designated as "open-pit mining" as distinguished from the "strip mining" of coal and the "quarrying" of other nonmetallic materials such as limestone, building stone, etc.

Opening - A short heading driven between two or more parallel headings or levels for ventilation.

Outcrop - A term used in connection with a vein or lode as an essential part of the definition of apex. It does not necessarily imply the visible presentation of the mineral on the surface of the earth, but includes those deposits that are so near to the surface as to be found easily by digging.

Overburden - Used by geologists and engineers in several different senses. By some, it is used to designate material of any nature, consolidated or unconsolidated, that overlies a deposit of useful materials, ores, or coal, especially those deposits that are mined from the surface by open cuts. By others, overburden designates only loose soil, sand, gravel, etc., that lies above the bedrock. The term should not be used without specific definition. Also called burden, cover, drift, mantle, surface.

Overriding Royalty - The term applied to a royalty reserved in a sublease or assignment over and above that reserved in the original lease.
Panel - System of coal extraction in which the ground is laid off in separate districts or panels, pillars of extra size being left between.

Parting - A natural, usually smooth, separation between strata.

Peat - There are two types of peat, low moor (Flachmoor) and high moor (Hochmoor) peat. Low moor peat is the most common starting material in coal genesis. It therefore constitutes a caustobiolith of low diagenetic degree. Peat is formed in marshes and swamps from the dead, and partly decomposed remains of the marsh vegetation. Stagnant ground water is necessary for peat formation to protect the residual plant material from decay. Peat has a yellowish brown to brownish black color, is generally of the fibrous consistency, and can be either plastic or friable; in its natural state it can be cut; further, it has a very high moisture content (above 75 percent, generally above 90 percent). It can be distinguished from brown coal by the fact that the greater part of its moisture content can be squeezed out by pressure (for example, in the hand). Peat also contains more plant material in a reasonably good state of preservation than brown coal.

Pillar - An area of coal or ore left to support the overlying strata or hanging-wall in a mine. Pillars are sometimes left permanently to support surface works or against old workings containing water. Coal pillars, such as those in pillar-and-stall mining, are extracted at a later period.

Pit - Any mine, quarry, or excavation area worked by the open-cut method to obtain material of value.

Pit Committee - A joint committee of employer and workers dealing with the labor problems of a mine.

Place - The part of a mine in which a miner works by contract is known as his "place" or "working place." A point at which the cutting of coal is being carried on.

Portal - Any entrance to a mine. The rock face at which tunnel driving is started. Also called point of attack. A nearly level opening into a tunnel. The surface entrance to a drift, tunnel, adit, or entry.

Portal to Portal - A term now frequently encountered in disputes over what constitutes compensable "working time" under Federal laws. Portal literally means "entrance" and, in underground coal mining, portal refers to mine mouth or entry at surface. Hence, portal-to-portal as a descriptive term means strictly elapsed time from entry through the portal to exit on return.

Post - A mine timber, or any upright timber, but more commonly used to refer to the uprights which support the roof cross-pieces. Commonly used in metal mines instead of leg which is the coal miner's term, especially in the Far West regions of the United States. The support fastened between the roof and floor of a coal seam used with certain types of mining machines or augers. A pillar of coal or ore.

Powdered Coal (Pulverized Coal) - Coal that has been crushed to a fine dust by grinding mills. The latter are often air swept, the velocity of the air being so regulated that particles of coal, when sufficiently reduced, are carried away. Pulverized coal particles of which about 99 percent are below 0.01 inch in diameter will burn very rapidly and efficiently. Low-grade coal may be pulverized and conveyed from the mill by air into the boiler plant.

Power Shovel - An excavating and loading machine consisting of a digging bucket at the end of an arm suspended from a boom, which extends crane-like from that part of the machine which houses the power plant. When digging the bucket moves forward and upward so that the machine does not usually excavate below the level at which it stands.

Pregnant Solution - A value-bearing solution in a hydrometallurgical operation.

Preparation Plant - Strictly speaking, a preparation plant may be any facility where coal is prepared for market, but by common usage it has come to mean a rather elaborate collection of facilities where coal is separated from its impurities, washed and sized, and loaded for shipment.

Proximate Analysis - The determination of the compounds contained in a mixture as distinguished from ultimate analysis, which is the determination of the elements contained in a compound. Used in the analysis of scoal.
Quarrying - The surface exploitation of stone or mineral deposits from the earth's crust. Removal of rock which has value because of its physical characteristics.
Reclamation - The costs incurred to restore land to its original (or better) condition.

Rock Dusting - The dusting of underground areas with powdered limestone to dilute the coal dust in the mine atmosphere thereby reducing explosion hazards.

Roll - Used to describe minor deformations or dislocations of a coal seam, for example, faults with small displacement to small monoclinal folds, to welts or ridges projecting from either the roof or floor into the coal, and to fillings of stream channels or low areas extending downward into the coal.

Roof Bolting (Pinning) - A system of roof support in mines. Boreholes from 3 to 8 feet long are drilled upward in the roof and bolts of 1 inch diameter or more are inserted into the holes and anchored at the top by a split cone or similar device. The bolt end protrudes below roof level and is used to support roof bars, girders, or simple steel plates pulled tight up to the roof by a nut on the bolt head. The bolts are put up to a definite pattern. The idea is to clamp together the several roof beds to form a composite beam with a strength considerably greater than the sum of the individual beds acting separately.

Room - A place abutting an entry or airway where coal has been mined and extending from the entry or airway to a face.

Room and Pillar - A system of mining in which the distinguishing feature is the winning of 50 percent or more of the coal or ore in the first working. The coal or ore is mined in rooms separated by narrow ribs or pillars. The coal or ore in the pillars is won by subsequent working, which may be likened to top slicing, in which the roof is caved in successive blocks. The first working in rooms is an advancing, and the winning of the rib (pillar) a retreating method. The rooms are driven parallel with one another, and the room faces may be extended parallel, at right angles, or at an angle to the dip. This method is applicable to flat deposits, such as coal, iron ore, lead, zinc, etc., that occur in bedded deposits.

Rotary Dump - An apparatus for overturning one or more mine cars simultaneously to discharge coal. They may rotate either 180 degrees or 360 degrees.

Royalty - A share of the product or profit reserved by the owner for permitting another to use the property. A lease by which the owner or lessor grants to the lessee the privilege of mining and operating the land in consideration of the payment of a certain stipulated royalty on the mineral produced.

Runoff - That portion of the rainfall that is not absorbed by the strata; is utilized by vegetation or lost by evaporation or may find its way into streams as surface flow.
Scraper Loader - A machine used for loading coal or rock by pulling an open-bottomed scoop back and forth between the face and the loading point by means of ropes, sheaves, and a multiple drum hoist. The filled scoop is pulled on the bottom to an apron or ramp where the load is discharged onto a car or conveyor.

Screen - A large sieve for grading or sizing coal, ore, rock, or aggregate. It consists of a suitably mounted surface of woven wire or of punched plate. It may be flat or cylindrical, horizontal or inclined, stationary, shaking, or vibratory, and either wet or dry operation.

Screenings - Coal which will pass through the smallest mesh screen normally loaded for commercial sale for industrial use.

Seam - A stratum or bed of coal or other mineral; generally applied to large deposits of coal.

Shaft - An excavation of limited area compared with its depth, made for finding or mining ore or coal, raising water, ore, rock, or coal, hoisting and lowering men and material, or ventilating underground workings. The term is often specifically applied to approximately vertical shafts, as distinguished from an incline or inclined shaft. A shaft is provided with a hoisting engine at the top for handling men, rock, and supplies, or it may be used only in connection with pumping or ventilating operations.

Shaker Conveyor - A conveyor consisting of a length of metal troughs, with suitable supports, to which a reciprocating motion is imparted by drives. In the case of a downhill conveyor, a simple to-and-fro motion is sufficient to cause the coal to slide. With a level or a slight uphill gradient, a differential motion is necessary, that is, a quick backward and slower forward strokes. The quick backward stroke causes the trough to slide under the coal, while the slower forward stroke moves the coal along to a new position. Also called jigger.

Shale - A laminated sediment, in which the constituent particles are predominantly of the clay grade.

Shearing - Making a vertical cut or groove in a coal face, breast, or block, as opposed to a kerf, which is a horizontal cut. Called in Arkansas as cut or cutting.

Shoot - To break coal loose from the seam by the use of explosives; loosely used, also as applied to other coal breaking devices.

Shooter - The person who fires a charged hole after satisfying himself/herself that the area is free from firedamp. A shot firer.

Short Ton - A unit of weight that equals 20 short hundredweights or 2,000 avoirdupois pounds. Used chiefly in the United States, in Canada, and in the Republic of South Africa.

Shortwall - The reverse of longwall, frequently used to mean the face of a room. A method of mining in which comparatively small areas are worked separately, as opposed to longwall; for example, room and pillar.

Shot Firer - A person whose special duty is to fire shots or blasts, especially in coal mines. A shot lighter.

Shovel - Any bucket-equipped machine used for digging and loading earthy or fragmented rock materials. There are two types of shovels, the square-point and the round-point. These are available with either long or short handles. The round-point shovel is used for general digging since its forward edge, curved to a point, most readily penetrates moist clays and sands. The square-point shovel is used for shoveling against hard surfaces or for trimming.

Shuttle Car - A vehicle on rubber tires or caterpillar treads and usually propelled by electric motors, electrical energy which is supplied by a diesel-driven generator, by storage batteries, or by a power distribution system through a portable cable. Its chief function is the transfer of raw materials, such as coal and ore, from loading machines in trackless areas of a mine to the main transportation system.

Silt - A fine-grained sediment having a particle size intermediate between that of fine sand and clay.

Slack - Small coal, usually less than 1/8 inch. It has a high ash content and is difficult to clean in the washery. High ash slack is being used increasingly in special boilers and power stations.

Slice - In an ore body of considerable lateral extent and thickness, the ore is removed in layers termed slices.

Slope - The main working gallery or entry of a coal seam which dips at an angle and along which mine cars are hauled. An entrance to a mine driven down through an inclined coal seam; also, a mine having such an entrance.

Slope Mine - A mine with an inclined opening used for the same purpose as a shaft or a drift mine. It resembles a tunnel, a drift, or a shaft, depending on its inclination.

Sludge - Mineral, mud, and slurry too thick to flow. A soft mud, slush, or mire; for example the solid product of a filtration process before drying (filter cake).

Slurry - The fine carbonaceous discharge from a colliery washery. All washeries produce some slurry which must be treated to separate the solids from the water in order to have a clear effluent for reuse or discharge. Also, in some cases, it is economical to extract the fine coal from the effluent.

Spoil Bank - To leave coal and other minerals that are not marketable in the mine.

Stoker Coal - A screen size of coal specifically for use in automatic firing equipment. This coal can be of any rank and the stoker is usually designed to fit the coal available. Factors of importance in the selection of coal for stoker use are: size limits, size consist, uniformity of shipments, coking properties, ash fusion characteristics, ash, sulfur and volatile-matter percentages.

Strip - In coal mining, to remove the earth, rock, and other material from a seam of coal, generally by power shovels. Generally practiced only where the coal seam lies close to the earth's surface. To remove from a quarry, or other open working, the overlying earth and disintegrated or barren surface rock.

Strip Mine - An opencut mine in which the overburden is removed from a coal bed before the coal is taken out.

Subsidence - A sinking down of a part of the earth's crust. The lowering of the strata, including the surface, due to underground excavations. Surface caving or distortion due to effects of collapse of deep workings.

Surface Mining - The mining in surface excavations. It includes placer mining, mining in open glory-hole or milling pits, mining and removing ore from open cuts by hand or with mechanical excavation and transportation equipment, and the removal of capping or overburden to uncover the ores. Mining at or near the surface. This type of mining is generally done where the overburden can be removed without too much expense. Also called strip mining, placer mining, opencast mining, opencut mining, or open-pit mining.

Surface Rights - The ownership of the surface of land only, where mineral rights are reserved. Those reserved to the owner of the land beneath which ore is being mined. The right of a mineral owner or an oil and gas lessee to use so much of the surface of land as may be reasonably necessary for the conduct of operations under the lease.
Timber - Any of the wooden props, posts, bars, collars, lagging, etc., used to support mining works. One of the steel joists or beams which, in some mines, have replaced wooden timbers.

Timbering - The operation of setting timber supports in mine workings or shafts. The term support would cover the setting of timber, steel, concrete, or masonry supports.

Timbering Machine - An electrically driven machine to raise and hold timbers in place while supporting posts are being set after cut to length by the machine's power-driven saw.

Tipple - Originally the place where the mine cars were tipped and emptied of their coal, and still used in that sense, although now more generally applied to the surface structures of a mine, including the preparation plant and loading tracks.

Trailing Cables - A flexible electric cable for connecting portable face machines and equipment to the source of supply located some distance outby. The cable is heavily insulated and protected with either galvanized steel wire armoring, extra stout braiding hosepipe, or other material.

Trolley Wire - The means by which power is conveyed to an electric trolley locomotive. It is hung from the roof and conducts power to the locomotive by the trolley pole. Power from it is sometimes also used to run other equipment.
Undercut - Excavation of ore from beneath a larger block of ore to induce its settlement under its own weight.
Vein - A zone or belt of mineralized rock lying within boundaries clearly separating it from neighboring rock. It includes all deposits of mineral matter found through a mineralized zone or belt coming from the same source, impressed with the same forms and appearing to have been created by the same processes. A mineralized zone having a more or less regular development in length, width, and depth to give it a tabular form and commonly inclined at a considerable angle to the horizontal. The term lode is commonly used synonymously for vein.

Volatile Matter - Those products, exclusive of moisture, given off by a material as gas and vapor, determined by definite prescribed methods which may vary according to the nature of the material. In the case of coal and coke, the methods employed shall be those prescribed in the Standard Methods of Laboratory Sampling and Analysis of Coal and Coke (ASTM Designation D271) of the American Society for Testing Materials.
Wall - The side of a lode; the overhanging side is know as the hanging wall and the lower lying side as the footwall. The face of a longwall working or stall, commonly called coal wall. A rib of solid coal between two rooms; also, the side of an entry.
Washery - A place at which ore, coal, or crushed stone is freed from impurities or dust by washing. Also called wet separation plant.
Wheel Excavator - A large-capacity machine for excavating loose deposits, particularly at quarries and opencast coalpits. It consists of a digging wheel, rotating on a horizontal axle, and carrying large buckets on its rim.
Wire Rod - Hot-rolled coiled stock that is made into wire.
Working Place - The place in a mine at which coal or ore is being actually mined.
Xenolith - A rock fragment of different composition enclosed in an igneous rock.
Yardage - The number of cubic yards of gravel contained in a placer deposit; also the number of cubic yards mined and processed per hour or per day.
Yield - The current annual dividend rate expressed as a percentage of the current market price of the stock.
Zircon - A durable, crystalline form of zirconium silicate that is commonly found in placer deposits.
Zone - An area of distinct mineralization.
Zone of oxidation - The upper portion of an orebody that has been oxidized.

Glossary of Selected Coal Classification Terms


accessed--Coal deposits that have been prepared for mining by construction of portals, shafts, slopes, drifts, and haulage ways; by removal of overburden; or by partial mining (see also virgin coal).

accessibility--In reference to coal resources (core meaning), the absence of land use restrictions and the assumption that ownership or leaseholds will be obtainable for mining (see also environmental restrictions, industrial restrictions). Many technological restrictions were traditionally applied as demonstrated reserve base criteria, but (extended meaning) with the advent of available resource studies, specific technologic restrictions may be incorporated in accessibility factors (see also restricted resources).

accessibility factor--The estimated regional ratio of accessible reserve base to the demonstrated reserve base or of accessible resources to identified resources.

accessible reserve base--The portion of the demonstrated reserve base estimated by EIA to be accessible, determined by application of one or more accessibility factors within an area. An accessible reserve base may be referred to as accessible resources because it is a subset of accessible resources and is usually part of a single resource study.

accessible resources--The portion of identified resources estimated to be accessible, determined by application of one or more accessibility factors within an area.

as-received condition or as-received basis--Represents an analysis of a sample as received at a laboratory.

availability--In reference to coal resources, the absence of land-use or environmental restrictions and technological restrictions.

available reserves--In EIA coal supply modeling, the difference between estimated recoverable reserves and recoverable reserves at active mines; in modeling context, these reserves are considered not presently obligated for existing mines and, therefore, would be available to supply new mines in the future.

available resources--In U.S. Geological Survey studies, the quantity of remaining identified resources available for development and potential extraction at the time of determination after adjusting for geologic considerations, land-use restrictions, and/or technological restrictions (see also accessible reserve base).

bed, coalbed--All the coal and partings lying between a roof and floor.

bench--A subdivision and (or) layer of a coal bed separated from other layers by partings of non-coal rock.

clean coal yield--In EIA models, the portion of reserves that will be salable coal after preparation, if any is done (see salable coal).

coal--A readily combustible rock containing more than 50 percent by weight and more than 70 percent by volume of carbonaceous material, including inherent moisture. It is formed from plant remains that have been compacted, indurated, chemically altered, and metamorphosed by heat and pressure during geologic time. Discussion: Differences in the kinds of plant materials, in the degree of metamorphism (rank), and in the range of impurities are characteristic of coal and are used in coal classification. Impure coal/coaly material containing more than 33 weight percent ash is excluded from resources and reserve estimates unless the ash is largely in associated partings so that the coal is cleanable to less than 33 weight percent ash.

coal preparation/washing--The treatment of coal to reject waste. In its broadest sense, preparation is any processing of mined coal to prepare it for market, including crushing and screening or sieving the coal to reach a uniform size, which normally results in removal of some non-coal material. The term coal preparation most commonly refers to processing, including crushing and screening, passing the material through one or more processes to remove impurities, sizing the product, and loading for shipment. Many of the processes separate rock, clay, and other minerals from coal in a liquid medium; hence the term washing is widely used. In some cases coal passes through a drying step before loading.

coal-producing region--An area that collectively encompasses a group of geographically contiguous or logically associated States or areas that currently or historically mine and market coal.

coal sampling--The collection and proper storage and handling of a relatively small quantity of coal for laboratory analysis. Sampling may be done for a wide range of purposes, such as: coal resource exploration and assessment, characterization of the reserves or production of a mine, to characterize the results of coal cleaning processes, to monitor coal shipments or receipts for adherence to coal quality contract specifications, or to subject a coal to specific combustion or reactivity tests related to the customer's intended use. During pre-development phases, such as exploration and resource assessment, sampling typically is from natural outcrops, test pits, old or existing mines in the region, drill cuttings, or drilled cores. Characterization of a mine's reserves or production may use sample collection in the mine, representative cuts from coal conveyors or from handling and loading equipment, or directly from stockpiles or shipments (coal rail cars or barges). Contract specifications rely on sampling from the production flow at the mining or coal handling facility or at the loadout, or from the incoming shipments at the receiver's facility. In all cases, the value of a sample taken depends on its being representative of the coal under consideration, which in turn requires that appropriate sampling procedures be carefully followed.

For coal resource and estimated reserve characterization, appropriate types of samples include:

face channel or channel sample--a sample taken at the exposed coal in a mine by cutting away any loose or weathered coal then collecting on a clean surface a sample of the coal seam by chopping out a channel of uniform width and depth; a face channel or face sample is taken at or near the working face, the most freshly exposed coal where actual removal and loading of mined coal is taking place. Any partings greater than 3/8 inch and/or mineral concretions greater than ½ inch thick and 2 inches in maximum diameter are normally discarded from a channel sample so as better to represent coal that has been mined, crushed, and screened to remove at least gross non-coal materials.

column sample--a channel or drill core sample taken to represent the entire geologic coalbed; it includes all partings and impurities that may exist in the coalbed.

bench sample--a face or channel sample taken of just that contiguous portion of a coalbed that is considered practical to mine, also known as a "bench;" For example, bench samples may be taken of minable coal where impure coal that makes up part of the geologic coalbed is likely to be left in the mine, or where thick partings split the coal into two or more distinct minable seams, or where extremely thick coalbeds cannot be recovered by normal mining equipment, so that the coal is mined in multiple passes, or benches, usually defined along natural bedding planes.

composite sample--a recombined coalbed sample produced by averaging together thickness-weighted coal analyses from partial samples of the coalbed, such as from one or more bench samples, from one or more mine exposures or outcrops where the entire bed could not be accessed in one sample, or from multiple drill cores that were required to retrieve all local sections of a coal seam.

coal supply region--An area in which the EIA coal reserves data are aggregated and allocated to a set of uniform, typical criteria for purposes of modeling. The criteria of a coal supply region may include coal heat and sulfur content or other quality parameters, coal rank, geographic continuity, traditional mining regions, State or county boundaries, transportation corridors and barriers, and marketing factors. Coal supply regions may vary for different modeling criteria; they may include the coal reserves of an entire State or a contiguous group of States; some major producing States may be split into more than one region.

coal zone--A series of laterally extensive and (or) lenticular coal beds and associated strata that arbitrarily can be viewed as a unit. Generally, the coal beds in a coal zone are assigned to the same geologic member or formation.

coalbed--All the coal and partings lying between a roof and floor.

committed reserves--In EIA coal supply modeling, synonymous with recoverable reserves at active mines; in modeling context, these reserves are considered obligated for existing mines and, therefore, not part of the reserves that would be available to supply new mines in the future.

compliance coal--A coal or a blend of coals that meets sulfur dioxide emission standards for air quality without the need for flue gas desulfurization.

cumulative depletion--The sum in tons of coal extracted and lost in mining to a stated date for a specified area or a specified coal bed.

demonstrated reserve base (DRB)--A collective term for the sum of coal in both measured and indicated resource categories of reliability; the DRB represents 100 percent of coal in place as of a certain date. Includes beds of bituminous coal and anthracite 28 inches or more thick and beds of subbituminous coal 60 inches or more thick that can be surface mined. Includes also thinner and/or deeper beds that presently are being mined or for which there is evidence that they could be mined commercially at this time. Represents that portion of the identified resources of coal from which reserves are calculated.

demonstrated resources--Same qualifications as identified resources, but includes measured and indicated degrees of geologic assurance and excludes the inferred.

depleted resources--Resources that have been mined; includes coal recovered, coal lost in mining, and coal rendered subeconomic as a result of mining the recovered coal. See cumulative depletion.

depletion--The subtraction of both the tonnage produced and the tonnage lost in mining from the demonstrated reserve base and identified resources to determine the remaining tonnage as of a certain time.

depletion factor--The multiplier of the tonnage produced that takes into account both the tonnage recovered and the tonnage lost due to mining. The depletion factor is the reciprocal of the recovery factor in relation to a given quantity of production.

dry, mineral-matter-free basis--A type of calculated analytical value of a coal sample expressed as if the total moisture and mineral matter had been removed. Mineral matter free is not the same as ash free.

economic--Term that implies that profitable extraction or production under realistic investment assumptions has been established, analytically demonstrated, or assumed with reasonable certainty.

environmental restrictions--Land-use or subsurface restrictions that constrain, postpone, or prohibit mining in order to protect environmental resources of an area; for example, surface- or groundwater quality, air quality affected by mining, or plants or animals or their habitats.

estimate--A determination as to the amount or tonnage of coal in an area. The term estimate indicates that the quantities of resources are known imprecisely. An estimate differs from an assessment, which is an analysis of all data concerning an area's coal resources and reserves with the objective of reaching a judgment about the geologic nature and economic potential of the coal resources and reserves of the area.

estimated recoverable reserves--See recoverable reserves.

floor--The upper surface of the stratum underlying a coal seam. In coals that were formed in persistent swamp environments, the floor is typically a bed of clay, known as "underclay," representing the soil in which the trees or other coal-forming swamp vegetation was rooted.

geologic assurance--State of sureness, confidence, or certainty of the existence of a quantity of resources based on the distance from points where coal is measured or sampled and on the abundance and quality of geologic data as related to thickness of overburden, rank, quality, thickness of coal, areal extent, geologic history, structure, and correlations of coal beds and enclosing rocks. The degree of assurance increases as the nearness to points of control, abundance, and quality of geologic data increases.

geologic considerations--Conditions in the coal deposit or in the rocks in which it occurs that may complicate or preclude mining. Geologic considerations are evaluated in the context of the current state of technology and regulations, so the impact on mining may change with time.

grade (of coal)--See quality.

hypothetical resources--Undiscovered coal resources in beds that may reasonably be expected to exist in known mining districts under known geologic conditions. In general, hypothetical resources are in broad areas of coalfields where points of observation are absent and evidence is from distant outcrops, drill holes, or wells. Exploration that confirms their existence and better defines their quantity and quality would permit their reclassification as identified resources. Quantitative estimates are based on a broad knowledge of the geologic character of coalbed or region. Measurements of coal thickness are more than 6 miles apart. The assumption of continuity of coalbed is supported only by geologic evidence.

identified resources--Specific bodies of coal whose location, rank, quality, and quantity are known from geologic evidence supported by engineering measurements. Included are beds of bituminous coal and anthracite 14 inches or more thick and beds of subbituminous coal and lignite 30 inches or more thick that occur at depths to 6,000 feet and whose existence and quantity have been delineated within specified degrees of geologic assurance as measured, indicated, or inferred.

indicated resources--Coal for which estimates of the rank, quality, and quantity have been computed partly from sample analyses and measurements and partly from reasonable geologic projections. Indicated resources are computed partly from specified measurements and partly from projection of visible data for a reasonable distance on the basis of geologic evidence. The points of observation are 0.5 to 1.5 miles apart. Indicated coal is projected to extend as a 0.5-mile-wide belt that lies more than 0.25 miles from the outcrop or points of observation or measurement.

industrial restrictions--Land-use restrictions that constrain, postpone, or prohibit mining in order to meet other industrial needs or goals; for example, resources not mined due to safety concerns or due to industrial or societal priorities, such as to preserve oil or gas wells that penetrate the coal reserves; to protect surface features such as pipelines, power lines, or company facilities; or to preserve public or private assets, such as highways, railroads, parks, or buildings.

inferred reserve base--the resources in the inferred reliability category that meet the same criteria of bed thickness and depth from surface as the demonstrated reserve base.

inferred resources--Coal in unexplored extensions of demonstrated resources for which estimates of the quality and size are based on geologic evidence and projection. Quantitative estimates are based largely on broad knowledge of the geologic character of the bed or region and where few measurements of bed thickness are available. The estimates are based primarily on an assumed continuation from demonstrated coal for which there is geologic evidence. The points of observation are 1.5 to 6 miles apart. Inferred coal is projected to extend as a 2.25-mile-wide belt that lies more than 0.75 miles from the outcrop or points of observation or measurement.

isopach--A line on a map drawn through points of equal thickness of a designated unit (such as a coal bed).

land-use restrictions--Constraints placed upon mining by societal policies to protect surface features or entities that could be affected by mining. Because laws and regulations may be modified or repealed, the restrictions, including industrial and environmental restrictions, are subject to change.

marginal reserves--Borders on being economic. See economic.

measured resources--Coal for which estimates of the rank, quality, and quantity have been computed, within a high degree of geologic assurance, from sample analyses and measurements from closely spaced and geologically well known sample sites. Measured resources are computed from dimensions revealed in outcrops, trenches, mine workings, and drill holes. The points of observation and measurement are so closely spaced and the thickness and extent of coals are so well defined that (for older estimates) the tonnage was judged to be accurate within 20 percent of true tonnage (statistical measures of error are no longer considered reliable for most measured resources). Although the spacing of the points of observation necessary to demonstrate continuity of the coal differs from region to region according to the character of the coalbeds, the points of observation are not greater than 0.5 mile apart. Measured coal is projected to extend as a 0.25-mile-wide belt from the outcrop or points of observation or measurement.

minable--Capable of being mined under current mining technology and environmental and legal restrictions, rules, and regulations.

original (resources/reserves)--The amount of coal in the ground before any production.

overburden--Any material, consolidated or unconsolidated, that lies between a coal deposit and the surface. Overburden is reported in feet and (or) meters and used to classify the depth to an underlying coal bed.

preparation plant--Broadly speaking, any facility where coal is prepared for market; usual accepted meaning is a rather elaborate collection of facilities where coal is separated from its impurities, washed and sized, and loaded for shipment. Also known as a wash plant or coal washer.

quality or grade--An informal classification of coal relating to its suitability for use for a particular purpose. Refers to individual measurements such as heat value, fixed carbon, moisture, ash, sulfur, phosphorus, major, minor, and trace elements, coking properties, petrologic properties, and particular organic constituents. The individual quality elements may be aggregated in various ways to classify coal for such special purposes as metallurgical, gas, petrochemical, and blending usages.

rank--The classification of coal relative to other coals, according to their degree of metamorphism, or progressive alteration, in the natural series from lignite to anthracite (Standard Classification of Coal by Rank, 1992, American Society for Testing and Materials, ASTM Designation D-388-91a).

recoverability--In reference to accessible coal resources, the condition of being physically, technologically, and economically minable. Recovery rates and recovery factors may be determined or estimated for coal resources without certain knowledge of their economic minability; therefore, the availability of recovery rates or factors does not predict recoverability.

recoverable coal--Coal that is, or can be, extracted from a coal bed during mining.

recoverable reserves, estimated recoverable reserves--Reserve estimates (broad meaning) based on a demonstrated reserve base adjusted for assumed accessibility factors and recovery factors. The term is used by EIA to distinguish estimated recoverable reserves, which are derived without specific economic feasibility criteria by factoring (downward) from a demonstrated reserve base for one or more study areas or regions, from recoverable reserves at active mines, which are aggregated (upward) from reserve estimates reported by currently active, economically viable mines on Form EIA-7A.

recoverable reserves at active mines--The amount of in situ coal that can be recovered by mining existing reserves at mines reporting on Form EIA-7A (see committed reserves).

recovery factor--The percentage of total tons of coal estimated to be recoverable from a given area in relation to the total tonnage estimated to be in the demonstrated reserve base. For the purpose of calculating depletion factors only, the estimated recovery factors for the demonstrated reserve base generally are 50 percent for underground mining methods and 80 percent for surface mining methods. More precise recovery factors can be computed by determining the total coal in place and the total coal recoverable in any specific locale.

recovery percentage/rate--The ratio of coal extracted from a bed as compared to the total quantity of coal originally in the bed.

remaining (resources/reserves)--The amount of coal in the ground after some mining, excluding coal in the ground spoiled or left in place for which later recovery is not feasible.

regional reserves, regional reserve estimates--Same as reserves; alternative wording is used by EIA to distinguish regional reserves, which are derived by factoring (downward) from a demonstrated reserve base for one or more study areas or regions, from reserves at active mines, which are aggregated (upward) from reserve estimates reported by individual mines on Form EIA-7A.

remaining (resources/reserves)--The amount of coal in the ground after some mining, excluding coal in the ground spoiled or left in place for which later recovery is not feasible.

reserve(s)--Root meaning: The amount of in-situ coal in a defined area that can be recovered by mining at a sustainable profit at the time of determination. Broad meaning: That portion of the demonstrated reserve base that is estimated to be recoverable at the time of determination. The reserve is derived by applying a recovery factor to that component of the identified resources of coal designated as the demonstrated reserve base.

reserves at active mines--The amount of in situ coal that can be recovered by mining existing reserves at mines reporting on Form EIA-7A (see committed reserves).

resources--Naturally occurring concentrations or deposits of coal in the Earth's crust, in such forms and amounts that economic extraction is currently or potentially feasible.

restricted coal resources--In U.S. Geological Survey studies, the quantity of remaining resources that is not available for development at the time of determination because of geologic considerations, land-use restrictions, and/or technological restrictions.

restricted resources--Those parts of any resource category that are restricted or prohibited from extraction by laws or regulations. Also, coal or a portion of the coal in categorically minable depths or thicknesses that is not economic at the time of determination.

roof--The rock immediately above a coal seam. The roof is commonly a shale, often carbonaceous and softer than rocks higher up in the roof strata.

run-of-mine--The raw coal recovered from a mine, prior to any treatment.

salable coal--The shippable product of a coal mine or preparation plant. Depending on customer specifications, salable coal may be run-of-mine, crushed-and-screened (sized) coal, or the clean coal yield from a preparation plant.

sample--A representative fraction of a coal bed collected by approved methods, guarded against contamination or adulteration, and analyzed to determine the nature; chemical, mineralogic, and (or) petrographic composition; percentage or parts-per-million content of specified constituents; heat value; and possibly the reactivity of the coal or its constituents.

seam--A bed of coal lying between a roof and floor. Equivalent term to bed, commonly used by industry.

speculative resources--Undiscovered coal in beds that may occur either in known types of deposits in a favorable geologic setting where no discoveries have been made, or in deposits that remain to be recognized. Exploration that confirms their existence and better defines their quantity and quality would permit their reclassification as identified resources.

strip or stripping ratio--The amount of overburden that must be removed to gain access to a unit amount of coal.

Discussion: A stripping ratio may be expressed as (1) thickness of overburden to thickness of coal, (2) volume of overburden to volume coal, (3) weight of overburden to weight of coal, or (4) cubic yards of overburden to tons of coal. A stripping ratio commonly is used to express the maximum thickness, volume, or weight of overburden that can be profitably removed to obtain a unit amount of coal.

strip or surface mining--The extraction of coal by using surface mining methods such as area strip mining, contour strip mining, or open-pit mining. The overburden covering the coal is removed and the coal extracted using power shovels, front-end loaders, or similar heavy equipment.

technological restrictions--Constraints related to economics and safety placed upon mining by contemporary technology or prescribed by law; the restrictions may change with advances in science or modifications in the law. For purposes of assessing impacts on minability, geologic considerations are included as technological restrictions. A secondary basis for accessibility is the technological restrictions that may affect economic minability of specific coal resources in a locality at the time of the evaluation. Technological restrictions include constraints on the economic or safe mining of the coal with contemporary technologies, which constraints are related to the nature of the coalbeds or local geology; for example, specific coalbed thickness or overburden characteristics known to deter economic mining of coal meeting broad regional DRB criteria, localized geologic structural problems, or unsafe or illegal proximity to another mine.

underground mining--The extraction of coal or its products from between enclosing rock strata by underground mining methods, such as room and pillar, longwall, and shortwall, or through in-situ gasification.

undiscovered resources--Unspecified bodies of coal surmised to exist on the basis of broad geologic knowledge and theory. Undiscovered resources include beds of bituminous coal and anthracite 14 inches or more thick and beds of subbituminous coal and lignite 30 inches or more thick that are presumed to occur in unmapped and unexplored areas to depths of 6,000 feet. The speculative and hypothetical resource categories comprise undiscovered resources.

virgin coal--Coal that has not been accessed by mining.
Source: http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/coal/reserves/glossary.html