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Coal-seam fire

A coal-seam fire is a burning of an outcrop or underground coal seam. Most coal-seam fires exhibit smouldering combustion,[1] particularly underground coal-seam fires, because of limited atmospheric oxygen availability. Coal-seam fire instances on Earth date back several million years.[2][3] Due to thermal insulation and the avoidance of rain/snow extinguishment by the crust, underground coal-seam fires are the most persistent fires on Earth and can burn for thousands of years, like Burning Mountain in Australia.[4] Coal-seam fires can be ignited by self-heating of low-temperature oxidation, lightning, wildfires and even arson. Coal-seam fires have been slowly shaping the lithosphere and changing atmosphere, but this pace has become faster and more extensive in modern times, triggered by mining.[5]

A coal fire in China
Open-cast mining continues near a fire at Jharia coalfield in India.

Coal fires are a serious health and safety hazard, affecting the environment by releasing toxic fumes; reigniting grass, brush, or forest fires; and causing subsidence of surface infrastructure such as roads, pipelines, electric lines, bridge supports, buildings, and homes. Whether started by humans or by natural causes, coal-seam fires continue to burn for decades or even centuries until either the fuel source is exhausted, a permanent groundwater table is encountered, the depth of the burn becomes greater than the ground's capacity to subside and vent, or humans intervene. Because they burn underground, coal-seam fires are extremely difficult and costly to extinguish, and are unlikely to be suppressed by rainfall.[6] There are strong similarities between coal fires and peat fires.

Across the world, thousands of underground coal fires are burning at any given moment. The problem is most acute in industrializing, coal-rich nations such as China.[5] Global coal fire emissions are estimated to cause 40 tons of mercury to enter the atmosphere annually, and to represent three percent of the world's annual CO2 emissions.[7]

Origins edit

 
Fire at the surface, Xinjiang, 2002

Coal-seam fires can be divided into near-surface fires, in which seams extend to the surface and the oxygen required for their ignition comes from the atmosphere, and fires in deep underground mines, where the oxygen comes from ventilation.

Mine fires may begin as a result of an industrial accident, generally involving a gas explosion. Historically, some mine fires were started when bootleg mining was stopped by authorities, usually by blowing the mine up. Many recent mine fires have started from people burning trash in a landfill that was in proximity to abandoned coal mines, including the much-publicized Centralia, Pennsylvania, fire, which has been burning since 1962. Of the hundreds of mine fires in the United States burning today, most are found in the state of Pennsylvania.

Some fires along coal seams are natural occurrences. Some coals may self-ignite at temperatures as low as 40 °C (104 °F) for brown coal in the right conditions of moisture and grain size.[8] The fire usually begins a foot or two inside the coal at a depth in which the permeability of the coal allows the inflow of air but in which the ventilation does not remove the heat which is generated. Self-ignition was a recognised problem in steamship times. One well known source of fires is mining breaking into a high pressure cavity of methane gas which on release can generate a spark of static electricity to ignite the gas and start a coal explosion and fire. The same gas static is well known in ships and care has to be taken to ensure no such static sparking can occur.

Two basic factors determine whether spontaneous combustion occurs or not, the ambient temperature and the grain size:

  • The higher the ambient temperature, the more quickly the oxidation reactions proceed.
  • The grain size and structure determine its surface area. Kinetics will be limited by availability of reactant, which in this case is carbon exposed to oxygen.

Wildfires (lightning-caused or others) can ignite the coal close to the surface or the entrance of a mine, and the smouldering fire can spread through the seam, creating subsidence that may open further seams to oxygen and spawn future wildfires when the fire breaks to the surface. Prehistoric clinker outcrops in the American West are the result of prehistoric coal fires that left a residue that resists erosion better than the matrix, leaving buttes and mesa. It is estimated that Australia's Burning Mountain, the oldest known coal fire, has burned for 6,000 years.[9]

Globally, thousands of inextinguishable mine fires are burning, especially in China where poverty, lack of government regulations and runaway development combine to create an environmental disaster. Modern strip mining exposes smouldering coal seams to the air, revitalizing the flames.

Rural Chinese in coal-bearing regions often dig coal for household use, abandoning the pits when they become too deep, leaving highly combustible coal dust exposed to the air. Using satellite imagery to map China's coal fires resulted in the discovery of many previously unknown fires. The oldest coal fire in China is in Baijigou (白芨沟, in Dawukou District of Shizuishan, Ningxia) and is said to have been burning since the Qing Dynasty (before 1912).[10]

Detection edit

 
The effect of underground coal fire visible on the surface

Before attempting to extinguish a near-surface coal-seam fire, its location and underground extent should be determined as precisely as possible. Besides studying the geographic, geologic and infrastructural context, information can be gained from direct measurements. These include:

  • Temperature measurements of the land surface, in fissures and boreholes, for example using pyrometers
  • Gas measurements to characterize the fire ventilation system (amount and velocity) and the gas composition, so that the combustion reactions can be described
  • Geophysical measurements on the ground and from aircraft to establish the extent of conductivity or other underground parameters. For example, conductivity measurements map humidity changes near the fire; measuring magnetism can determine changes in the magnetic characteristics of the adjacent rock caused by heat
  • Remote sensing from aircraft and satellites. High resolution optical mapping, thermal imaging and hyperspectral data play a role. Underground coal fires of several hundred to over a thousand degrees Celsius may raise the surface temperature by only a few degrees. This order of magnitude is similar to the temperature difference between the sunlit and shadowed slopes of a slag heap or sand dune. Infrared detecting equipment is able to track the fire's location as the fire heats the ground on all sides of it.[11] However, remote sensing techniques are unable to distinguish individual fires burning near one another and often lead to undercounting of actual fires.[12] They may also have some difficulties distinguishing coal-seam fires from forest fires. Combining in-situ data with remote sensing data does allow for monitoring of coal fire intensity over longer periods using time-series analyses.[13]

Underground coal mines can be equipped with permanently installed sensor systems. These relay pressure, temperature, airflow and gas composition measurements to the safety monitoring personnel, giving them early warning of any problems.

Environmental impact edit

 
Coal-seam fire
 
Residents evacuate West Glenwood, Glenwood Springs, Colorado, 2002
 
A coal-seam fire near Denniston, New Zealand

Besides destruction of the affected areas, coal fires often emit toxic gases, including carbon monoxide and sulphur dioxide. China's coal fires, which consume an estimated 20 – 200 million tons of coal a year, make up as much as 1 percent of the global carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels.[9]

One of the most visible changes will be subsidence. Another local environmental effect can include the presence of plants or animals that are aided by the coal fire. The prevalence of non-native plants can depend upon the fire's duration and the size of the affected area. For example, near a coal fire in Germany, many Mediterranean insects and spiders were identified in a region with cold winters, and it is believed that elevated ground temperatures above the fires permitted their survival.[14]

Extinguishing coal fires edit

In order to thrive, a fire requires fuel, oxygen, and heat. As underground fires are very difficult to reach directly, fire fighting involves finding an appropriate methodology which addresses the interaction of fuel and oxygen for the specific fire in question. A fire can be isolated from its fuel source, for example through firebreaks or fireproof barriers. Many fires, particularly those on steep slopes, can be completely excavated. In the case of near-surface coal-seam fires, the influx of oxygen in the air can be interrupted by covering the area or installing gas-tight barriers. Another possibility is to hinder the outflow of combustion gases so that the fire is quenched by its own exhaust fumes. Energy can be removed by cooling, usually by injecting large amounts of water. However, if any remaining dry coal absorbs water, the resulting heat of absorption can lead to re-ignition of a once-quenched fire as the area dries. Accordingly, more energy must be removed than the fire generates. In practice these methods are combined, and each case depends on the resources available. This is especially true for water, for example in arid regions, and for covering material, such as loess or clay, to prevent contact with the atmosphere.

Extinguishing underground coal fires, which sometimes exceed temperatures of 540 °C (1,000 °F), is both highly dangerous and very expensive.[9]

Near-surface coal-seam fires are routinely extinguished in China following a standard method basically consisting of the following phases:

  • Smoothing the surface above the fire with heavy equipment to make it fit for traffic.
  • Drilling holes in the fire zone about 20 m apart down to the source of the fire, following a regular grid.
  • Injecting water or mud in the boreholes long term, usually 1 to 2 years.
  • Covering the entire area with an impermeable layer about 1 m thick, e.g., of loess.
  • Planting vegetation to the extent the climate allows.

Efforts are underway to refine this method, for example with additives to the quenching water or with alternative extinguishing agents.

Underground coal-seam fires are customarily quenched by inertisation through mine rescue personnel. Toward this end the affected area is isolated by dam constructions in the galleries. Then an inert gas, usually nitrogen, is introduced, usually making use of available pipelines.

In 2004, the Chinese government claimed success in extinguishing a mine fire at a colliery near Urumqi in China's Xinjiang province that had been burning since 1874. However, a March 2008 Time magazine article quotes researcher Steven Q. Andrews as saying, "I decided to go to see how it was extinguished, and flames were visible and the entire thing was still burning. ... They said it was put out, and who is to say otherwise?"[15]

A jet engine unit, known as Gorniczy Agregat Gasniczy (GAG), was developed in Poland and successfully used for fighting coal fires and displacing firedamp in mines.

Current research and new developments in extinguishing fires edit

Time magazine reported in July 2010 that less expensive alternatives for extinguishing coal-seam fires were beginning to reach the market, including heat-resistant grouts and a fire-smothering nitrogen foam, with other innovative solutions on the way.[7]

List of mine fires edit

Some of the more notable mine fires around the world are listed below.

Australia edit

  • Burning Mountain – a naturally occurring, slow-combusting underground coal seam, it has been burning for over 5500 years.
  • Hill End Colliery fire – a coal-seam fire at Cessnock, New South Wales, that burned from, at latest, August 1930 to probably as late as June 1949.
  • Blair Athol coal mine – a mine, near Clermont, Queensland, that has been the site of a number of fires, one of which burned underground for 54 years.
  • Morwell, Victoria – the Great Morwell open cut mine caught fire in March 1902 and burned for over a month. It was extinguished by breaching the nearby Morwell River with explosives to flood the mine. The fire was found to have been caused by sabotage from incendiary devices.[16][17]
  • Hazelwood Power Station – a 2 km coal face in the Hazelwood open cut mine was set alight by a bushfire in October 2006[18] and again in February 2014.[19] Thousands of residents were affected by the fire at the Hazelwood coal mine in 2014 which burned for 45 days sending smoke across the community of Morwell in Victoria.[20] Government advised the vulnerable groups of people in South Morwell to relocate temporarily due to the danger of PM2.5 particulate matter. In May 2020 the Hazelwood Power Corporation was fined $1.56 million for occupational health and safety breaches associated with the fire.[21]

Canada edit

China edit

In China, the world's largest coal producer with an annual output around 2.5 billion tons, coal fires are a serious problem. It has been estimated that some 10–200 million tons of coal uselessly burn annually, and that the same amount again is made inaccessible to mining.[10] Coal fires extend over a belt across the entire north China, whereby over one hundred major fire areas are listed, each of which contains many individual fire zones. They are concentrated in the provinces of Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia and Ningxia. Beside losses from burned and inaccessible coal, these fires contribute to air pollution and considerably increased levels of greenhouse gas emissions and have thereby become a problem which has gained international attention.

France edit

 
Outcrops of pyrometamorphic rocks (porcelanites) from 17th century's coal seam fires at Mont Salson, Saint-Etienne, France

In Saint-Etienne coal basin, five burning hills (montagnes de feu) have been described from the late 16th Century to the early 19th century around the city of Saint-Etienne.[23][24] Some of these fires were reported burning for 3 centuries. Most of them are extinguished in 1785 [25] These old burning hills correspond today to the Mont Salson, Bois d'Avaize and Cote Chaude in Saint-Etienne, la colline du Brûlé in la Ricamarie and Le mont du Feu (Mount of fire) in Genilac. The fire in Genilac lasted 30 years from 1740.[24] Outcrops of pyrometamorphic rocks generated by these fires are visible today on Mont Salson and bois d'Avaize.

Germany edit

In Planitz, now a part of the city of Zwickau, a coal seam that had been burning since 1476 was only quenched in 1860.[26][27] In Dudweiler, Saarland, a coal-seam fire ignited around 1668 and is still burning.[28] This so-called Burning Mountain ("Brennender Berg") soon became a tourist attraction and was even visited by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.[29] Also well-known is the so-called Stinksteinwand (stinking stone wall) in Schwalbenthal on the eastern slope of the Hoher Meißner, where several seams caught fire centuries ago after lignite coal mining ceased; combustion gas continues to reach the surface.[30]

India edit

In India, as of 2010, 68 fires were burning beneath a 58-square-mile (150 km2) region of the Jharia coalfield in Dhanbad, Jharkhand. Mine fires started in this region in 1916 and are rapidly destroying the only source of prime coking coal in the country.[31]

Indonesia edit

Coal and peat fires in Indonesia are often ignited by forest fires near deposits at the surface. It is difficult to determine when a forest fire is started by a coal-seam fire, or vice versa.[6] The most common cause of forest fires and haze in Indonesia is intentional burning of forest to clear land for plantation crops of pulp wood, rubber and palm oil.

No accurate count of coal-seam fires has been completed in Indonesia. Only a minuscule fraction of the country has been surveyed for coal fires.[6] The best data available come from a study based on systematic, on-the-ground observation. In 1998, a total of 125 coal fires were located and mapped within a 2-kilometer strip either side of a 100-kilometer stretch of road north of Balikpapan to Samarinda in East Kalimantan, using hand-held Global Positioning System (GPS) equipment. Extrapolating this data to areas on Borneo and Sumatra underlain by known coal deposits, it was estimated that more than 250,000 coal-seam fires may have been burning in Indonesia in 1998.[12]

Land clearing practices which use fire, often starting forest fires, may be the cause of coal-seam fires in Indonesia. In 1982 and 1983 one of the largest forest fires in this century raged for several months through an estimated 5 million hectares of Borneo's tropical rainforests. Goldammer and Seibert however concluded that there are indications that coal-seam fires already occurred between 13,200 and 15,000 BP.[32]

A fire season usually occurs every 3 to 5 years, when the climate in parts of Indonesia becomes exceptionally dry from June to November due to the El Niño–Southern Oscillation off the west coast of South America. Since 1982, fire has been a recurring feature on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra, burning large areas in 1987, 1991, 1994, 1997–1998, 2001 and 2004.[12]

In October 2004 smoke from land clearing again covered substantial portions of Borneo and Sumatra, disrupting air travel,[33] increasing hospital admissions,[34] and extending to portions of Brunei, Singapore and Malaysia.[35] Coal outcrops are so common in Indonesia it is virtually certain these fires ignited new coal-seam fires.

New Zealand edit

Norway edit

In 1944, Longyearbyen Mine #2 on Svalbard was set alight by sailors from the German battleship Tirpitz on its final sortie outside of Norwegian coastal waters. The mine continued to burn for 20 years, while some of the areas were subsequently mined from the reconstructed Mine #2b.

South Africa edit

  • Transvaal and Delagoa Bay Collieries near Emalahleni (formerly known as Witbank), Mpumalanga has been burning since the mine was abandoned in 1953.[37]

United States edit

 
Clinker exposed by a cutting for a road through Willow Creek Canyon, Carbon County, Utah
 
Close up showing fused rock in a clinker
 
Wall of clinker in a roadcut

Many coalfields in the US are subject to spontaneous ignition. The federal Office of Surface Mining (OSM) maintains a database (AMLIS), which in 1999 listed 150 fire zones. In mid-2010, according to OSM, more than 100 fires were burning beneath nine states, most of them in Colorado, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Utah and West Virginia. Some geologists say that many fires go unreported, so that the actual number of them may be nearer to 200, across 21 states.[7]

In Pennsylvania, 45 fire zones are known, the most famous being the Centralia mine fire in the Centralia mine in the hard coal region of Columbia County, which has been burning since 1962.[7] Burning Mine, near Summit Hill, caught fire in 1859.[38]

In Colorado, coal fires have arisen as a consequence of fluctuations in the groundwater level, which can increase the temperature of the coal up to 300 °C, enough to cause it to spontaneously ignite.[citation needed]

The Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana contains some 800 billion tons of brown coal, and the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804 to 1806) reported fires there. Fires have been a natural occurrence in this area for about three million years and have shaped the landscape. For example, an area about 4,000 square kilometres in size is covered with coal clinker, some of it in Theodore Roosevelt National Park, where there is a spectacular view of fiery red coal clinker from Scoria Point.[39]

In popular culture edit

The 1991 film Nothing but Trouble, directed and co-written by Dan Aykroyd, features a town, Valkenvania, that has an underground coal fire that has been burning for decades. The judge of the town references the constantly burning coal-mine fire as the source of his hatred of financiers.

In the TV show Scorpion, Season 3, Episode 23, the Scorpion team extinguishes an underground coal fire in Wyoming.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rein, G. (2013). "Smouldering Fires and Natural Fuels". In Belcher, C. M.; et al. (eds.). Fire Phenomena and the Earth System: An Interdisciplinary Guide to Fire Science. Wiley and Sons. pp. 15–34.
  2. ^ Heffern, E. L. & Coates, D. A. (2004). "Geologic history of natural coal-bed fires, Powder River basin, USA". International Journal of Coal Geology. 59 (1–2): 25–47. Bibcode:2004IJCG...59...25H. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2003.07.002.
  3. ^ Zhang, X.; Kroonenberg, S. B. & De Boer, C. B. (2004). "Dating of coal fires in Xinjiang, north‐west China". Terra Nova. 16 (2): 68–74. Bibcode:2004TeNov..16...68Z. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3121.2004.00532.x. S2CID 59475840.
  4. ^ Ellyett, C. D. & Fleming, A. W. (1974). "Thermal infrared imagery of the Burning Mountain coal fire". Remote Sensing of Environment. 3 (1): 79–86. Bibcode:1974RSEnv...3...79E. doi:10.1016/0034-4257(74)90040-6.
  5. ^ a b Song, Z. & Kuenzer, C. (2014). "Coal fires in China over the last decade: A comprehensive review". International Journal of Coal Geology. 133: 72–99. Bibcode:2014IJCG..133...72S. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2014.09.004.
  6. ^ a b c Whitehouse, Alfred & Mulyana, Asep A. S. (2004). "Coal Fires in Indonesia". International Journal of Coal Geology. Amsterdam: Elsevier. 2012 (1–2): 91–97 [p. 95]. Bibcode:2004IJCG...59...91W. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2003.08.010. ISSN 0166-5162.
  7. ^ a b c d Cray, Dan (23 July 2010). . Time. Archived from the original on 28 July 2010.
  8. ^ Kuenzer, C.; Stracher, G. B. (2012). "Geomorphology of coal seam fires". Geomorphology. 138 (1): 209–222.
  9. ^ a b c Krajick, Kevin (1 May 2005). "Fire in the Hole". Smithsonian. pp. 54ff. Retrieved 16 January 2007.
  10. ^ a b Rennie, David (1 February 2002). "How China's scramble for 'black gold' is causing a green disaster". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
  11. ^ Zhang, J.; Wagner, W.; Prakash, A.; Mehl, H. & Voigt, S. (2004). "Detecting coal fires using remote sensing techniques". International Journal of Remote Sensing. 25 (16): 3193–3220. Bibcode:2004IJRS...25.3193Z. doi:10.1080/01431160310001620812. S2CID 140197767.
  12. ^ a b c Hamilton, Michael S.: Miller, Richard O. & Whitehouse, Alfred E. (2000). "The Continuing Fire Threat in Southeast Asia". Environmental Science & Technology. 34 (February): 82A-85A.
  13. ^ Song, S.; Kuenzer, C.; Zhang, Z.; Jia, Y.; Sun, Y. & Zhang, J. (2015). "Detecting coal fires using remote sensing techniques". International Journal of Coal Geology. 141: 91–102. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2015.03.008.
  14. ^ nabu-aachen-land.de: Bergehalden im Aachener Revier
  15. ^ , Time, 14 March 2008 (retrieved 17 March 2008)
  16. ^ "Coal mine fired by incendiary". The Advertiser. 1 April 1902.
  17. ^ "A coal mine on fire". The Advertiser. 2 April 1902.
  18. ^ "Massive coal mine blaze still burning". The Age. 13 October 2006.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 March 2020. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  20. ^ "Morwell coalmine fire finally extinguished after 45 days". The Guardian. 25 March 2014. Retrieved 22 April 2014.
  21. ^ "Hazelwood mine operators fined $1.9 million over blaze that burned for 45 days". ABC. 19 May 2020.
  22. ^ . Elkford Chamber of Commerce. Archived from the original on 21 July 2010. Retrieved 16 August 2015.
  23. ^ Historique des mines de houille du département de la Loire, par E. Leseure, 1901, p.26-27
  24. ^ a b Mémoire sur la topographie extérieure et souterraine du territoire houiller de Saint-Etienne et de Rive-de-Gier. Louis Beaunier 1817, p.143
  25. ^ Essai sur la lithologie des environs de Saint-Etienne-en-Forez, De Bournon, 1785, from p.23
  26. ^ Peschke, Norbert (1998). Planitz im Wandel der Zeiten [Planitz Through the Ages] (in German). Sutton Verlag GmbH. p. 18. ISBN 978-3-89702-016-0.
  27. ^ [The coal seam fire of Planitz]. Was Ist Was (in German). Archived from the original on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  28. ^ "Das Naturdenkmal Brennender Berg bei Dudweiler" [The natural monument Burning Mountain in Dudweiler]. Mineralienatlas (in German). Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  29. ^ Fell, Günter. "Goethe" (in German). Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  30. ^ "Der Berg Meißner" (in German). Gemeinde Meißner. Retrieved 3 October 2016. An der Stinksteinwand in der Nähe des Gasthauses Schwalbenthal strömen im Übrigen seit 300 Jahren durch die Klüfte des Basaltes die Gase eines schwelenden Kohleflözes aus.
  31. ^ . Agence Vu. Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 15 June 2012.
  32. ^ Goldammer, J.G.; Seibert, B. (1989). "Natural rain forest fires in Eastern Borneo during the Pleistocene and Holocene", Naturwissenschaften, November 1989, Volume 76, Issue 11, p. 518-520.
  33. ^ "Haze disrupts flights in Central Kalimantan". The Jakarta Post. 17 October 2004, 1.
  34. ^ "Haze thick over Kalimantan". The Jakarta Post 19 October 2004, 1.
  35. ^ "Haze thickens in Sumatra and Kalimantan, affects Malaysia". The Jakarta Post 16 October 2004, 1.
  36. ^ . Geology Department, University of Otago, New Zealand. 1 September 2004. Archived from the original on 16 October 2008. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  37. ^ Limpitlaw, D.; Aken, M.; Lodewijks, H. & Viljoen, J. (13 July 2005). Sustainable Development in the life of coal mining in South Africa (Report). South African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. p. 3.
  38. ^ "Summit Hill", in The Columbia Viking Desk Encyclopedia (1953), New York: Viking.
  39. ^ "North Dakota's Clinker". Retrieved 16 August 2015.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 September 2021. Retrieved 16 August 2015.
  41. ^ https://assets.bouldercounty.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/marshall-fire-investigative-summary.pdf pp 10-11

Further reading edit

  • Kuenzer, C.; Zhang, J.; Tetzlaff, A.; van Dijk, P.; Voigt, S.; Mehl, H.; Wagner, W. (2007). "Uncontrolled coal fires and their environmental impacts: Investigating two arid mining regions in north-central China". Applied Geography. 27: 42–62. doi:10.1016/j.apgeog.2006.09.007.
  • "Satellites track the fires raging beneath India". New Scientist. 18 July 2006. pp. 25ff. Retrieved 16 January 2007.
  • Kuenzer, C.; Stracher, G. (2011). "Geomorphology of Coal Seam Fires". Geomorphology. 138 (1): 209–222. Bibcode:2012Geomo.138..209K. doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2011.09.004.
  • Van Dijk, P.; Zhang, J.; Jun, W.; Kuenzer, C.; Wolf, W.H. (2011). "Assessment of the contribution of in-situ combustion of coal to greenhouse gas emission; based on a comparison of Chinese mining information to previous remote sensing estimates". International Journal of Coal Geology. 86 (1): 108–119. Bibcode:2011IJCG...86..108V. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2011.01.009.
  • Zhang, J.; Kuenzer, C. (2007). "Thermal surface characteristics of coal fires 1: Results of in-situ measurements". Journal of Applied Geophysics. 63 (3–4): 117–134. Bibcode:2007JAG....63..117Z. doi:10.1016/j.jappgeo.2007.08.002.
  • Zhang, J.; Kuenzer, C.; Tetzlaff, A.; Oettl, D.; Zhukov, B.; Wagner, W. (2007). "Thermal characteristics of coal fires 2: Results of measurements on simulated coal fires". Journal of Applied Geophysics. 63 (3–4): 135–147. Bibcode:2007JAG....63..135Z. doi:10.1016/j.jappgeo.2007.08.003.
  • Kuenzer, C.; Hecker, C.; Zhang, J.; Wessling, S.; Wagner, W. (2008). "The potential of multi-diurnal MODIS thermal bands data for coal fire detection". International Journal of Remote Sensing. 29 (3): 923–944. Bibcode:2008IJRS...29..923K. doi:10.1080/01431160701352147. S2CID 129522775.
  • Kuenzer, C.; Zhang, J.; Li, J.; Voigt, S.; Mehl, H.; Wagner, W. (2007). "Detection of unknown coal fires: synergy of coal fire risk area delineation and improved thermal anomaly extraction". International Journal of Remote Sensing. 28 (20): 4561–4585. Bibcode:2007IJRS...28.4561K. doi:10.1080/01431160701250432. S2CID 129927653.
  • Wessling, S.; Kuenzer, C.; Kesselsf, W.; Wuttke, M. (2008). "Numerical modelling to analyze underground coal fire induced thermal surface anomalies". International Journal of Coal Geology. 74: 175–184. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2007.12.005.
  • Kuenzer, C.; Zhang, J.; Sun, Y.; Jia, Y.; Dech, S. (2012). "Coal fires revisited: the Wuda coal field in the aftermath of extensive coal fire research and accelerating extinction activities". International Journal of Coal Geology. 102: 75–86. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2012.07.006.
  • Vallero, Daniel; Letcher, Trevor (2012). Unraveling Environmental Disasters. Amsterdam: Elsevier Academic Press. ISBN 978-0123970268.

External links edit

  • The Status of Mine Fire Research in the United States, The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2008)
  • Encyclopedia of Earth: Coal fires
  • Encyclopedia of Earth: Coalfire and remote sensing
  • (site about coal mine fires from Anupma Prakash, of the Univ. of Alaska-Fairbanks)
  • "Fighting Infernos Underground". Popular Mechanics, September 1951, pp. 124–130.
  • "Earth on Fire". Discover.
  • "Seeking Cures in Kentucky Coal Mines". Newsweek.
  • Link to video, UK Looks for Natural Products in Kentucky's Unique Environments

coal, seam, fire, coal, fire, redirects, here, unincorporated, community, coal, fire, alabama, coal, seam, fire, burning, outcrop, underground, coal, seam, most, coal, seam, fires, exhibit, smouldering, combustion, particularly, underground, coal, seam, fires,. Coal fire redirects here For the unincorporated community see Coal Fire Alabama A coal seam fire is a burning of an outcrop or underground coal seam Most coal seam fires exhibit smouldering combustion 1 particularly underground coal seam fires because of limited atmospheric oxygen availability Coal seam fire instances on Earth date back several million years 2 3 Due to thermal insulation and the avoidance of rain snow extinguishment by the crust underground coal seam fires are the most persistent fires on Earth and can burn for thousands of years like Burning Mountain in Australia 4 Coal seam fires can be ignited by self heating of low temperature oxidation lightning wildfires and even arson Coal seam fires have been slowly shaping the lithosphere and changing atmosphere but this pace has become faster and more extensive in modern times triggered by mining 5 A coal fire in ChinaOpen cast mining continues near a fire at Jharia coalfield in India Coal fires are a serious health and safety hazard affecting the environment by releasing toxic fumes reigniting grass brush or forest fires and causing subsidence of surface infrastructure such as roads pipelines electric lines bridge supports buildings and homes Whether started by humans or by natural causes coal seam fires continue to burn for decades or even centuries until either the fuel source is exhausted a permanent groundwater table is encountered the depth of the burn becomes greater than the ground s capacity to subside and vent or humans intervene Because they burn underground coal seam fires are extremely difficult and costly to extinguish and are unlikely to be suppressed by rainfall 6 There are strong similarities between coal fires and peat fires Across the world thousands of underground coal fires are burning at any given moment The problem is most acute in industrializing coal rich nations such as China 5 Global coal fire emissions are estimated to cause 40 tons of mercury to enter the atmosphere annually and to represent three percent of the world s annual CO2 emissions 7 Contents 1 Origins 2 Detection 3 Environmental impact 4 Extinguishing coal fires 5 Current research and new developments in extinguishing fires 6 List of mine fires 6 1 Australia 6 2 Canada 6 3 China 6 4 France 6 5 Germany 6 6 India 6 7 Indonesia 6 8 New Zealand 6 9 Norway 6 10 South Africa 6 11 United States 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksOrigins edit nbsp Fire at the surface Xinjiang 2002Coal seam fires can be divided into near surface fires in which seams extend to the surface and the oxygen required for their ignition comes from the atmosphere and fires in deep underground mines where the oxygen comes from ventilation Mine fires may begin as a result of an industrial accident generally involving a gas explosion Historically some mine fires were started when bootleg mining was stopped by authorities usually by blowing the mine up Many recent mine fires have started from people burning trash in a landfill that was in proximity to abandoned coal mines including the much publicized Centralia Pennsylvania fire which has been burning since 1962 Of the hundreds of mine fires in the United States burning today most are found in the state of Pennsylvania Some fires along coal seams are natural occurrences Some coals may self ignite at temperatures as low as 40 C 104 F for brown coal in the right conditions of moisture and grain size 8 The fire usually begins a foot or two inside the coal at a depth in which the permeability of the coal allows the inflow of air but in which the ventilation does not remove the heat which is generated Self ignition was a recognised problem in steamship times One well known source of fires is mining breaking into a high pressure cavity of methane gas which on release can generate a spark of static electricity to ignite the gas and start a coal explosion and fire The same gas static is well known in ships and care has to be taken to ensure no such static sparking can occur Two basic factors determine whether spontaneous combustion occurs or not the ambient temperature and the grain size The higher the ambient temperature the more quickly the oxidation reactions proceed The grain size and structure determine its surface area Kinetics will be limited by availability of reactant which in this case is carbon exposed to oxygen Wildfires lightning caused or others can ignite the coal close to the surface or the entrance of a mine and the smouldering fire can spread through the seam creating subsidence that may open further seams to oxygen and spawn future wildfires when the fire breaks to the surface Prehistoric clinker outcrops in the American West are the result of prehistoric coal fires that left a residue that resists erosion better than the matrix leaving buttes and mesa It is estimated that Australia s Burning Mountain the oldest known coal fire has burned for 6 000 years 9 Globally thousands of inextinguishable mine fires are burning especially in China where poverty lack of government regulations and runaway development combine to create an environmental disaster Modern strip mining exposes smouldering coal seams to the air revitalizing the flames Rural Chinese in coal bearing regions often dig coal for household use abandoning the pits when they become too deep leaving highly combustible coal dust exposed to the air Using satellite imagery to map China s coal fires resulted in the discovery of many previously unknown fires The oldest coal fire in China is in Baijigou 白芨沟 in Dawukou District of Shizuishan Ningxia and is said to have been burning since the Qing Dynasty before 1912 10 Detection edit nbsp The effect of underground coal fire visible on the surfaceBefore attempting to extinguish a near surface coal seam fire its location and underground extent should be determined as precisely as possible Besides studying the geographic geologic and infrastructural context information can be gained from direct measurements These include Temperature measurements of the land surface in fissures and boreholes for example using pyrometers Gas measurements to characterize the fire ventilation system amount and velocity and the gas composition so that the combustion reactions can be described Geophysical measurements on the ground and from aircraft to establish the extent of conductivity or other underground parameters For example conductivity measurements map humidity changes near the fire measuring magnetism can determine changes in the magnetic characteristics of the adjacent rock caused by heat Remote sensing from aircraft and satellites High resolution optical mapping thermal imaging and hyperspectral data play a role Underground coal fires of several hundred to over a thousand degrees Celsius may raise the surface temperature by only a few degrees This order of magnitude is similar to the temperature difference between the sunlit and shadowed slopes of a slag heap or sand dune Infrared detecting equipment is able to track the fire s location as the fire heats the ground on all sides of it 11 However remote sensing techniques are unable to distinguish individual fires burning near one another and often lead to undercounting of actual fires 12 They may also have some difficulties distinguishing coal seam fires from forest fires Combining in situ data with remote sensing data does allow for monitoring of coal fire intensity over longer periods using time series analyses 13 Underground coal mines can be equipped with permanently installed sensor systems These relay pressure temperature airflow and gas composition measurements to the safety monitoring personnel giving them early warning of any problems Environmental impact edit nbsp Coal seam fire nbsp Residents evacuate West Glenwood Glenwood Springs Colorado 2002 nbsp A coal seam fire near Denniston New ZealandBesides destruction of the affected areas coal fires often emit toxic gases including carbon monoxide and sulphur dioxide China s coal fires which consume an estimated 20 200 million tons of coal a year make up as much as 1 percent of the global carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels 9 One of the most visible changes will be subsidence Another local environmental effect can include the presence of plants or animals that are aided by the coal fire The prevalence of non native plants can depend upon the fire s duration and the size of the affected area For example near a coal fire in Germany many Mediterranean insects and spiders were identified in a region with cold winters and it is believed that elevated ground temperatures above the fires permitted their survival 14 Extinguishing coal fires editIn order to thrive a fire requires fuel oxygen and heat As underground fires are very difficult to reach directly fire fighting involves finding an appropriate methodology which addresses the interaction of fuel and oxygen for the specific fire in question A fire can be isolated from its fuel source for example through firebreaks or fireproof barriers Many fires particularly those on steep slopes can be completely excavated In the case of near surface coal seam fires the influx of oxygen in the air can be interrupted by covering the area or installing gas tight barriers Another possibility is to hinder the outflow of combustion gases so that the fire is quenched by its own exhaust fumes Energy can be removed by cooling usually by injecting large amounts of water However if any remaining dry coal absorbs water the resulting heat of absorption can lead to re ignition of a once quenched fire as the area dries Accordingly more energy must be removed than the fire generates In practice these methods are combined and each case depends on the resources available This is especially true for water for example in arid regions and for covering material such as loess or clay to prevent contact with the atmosphere Extinguishing underground coal fires which sometimes exceed temperatures of 540 C 1 000 F is both highly dangerous and very expensive 9 Near surface coal seam fires are routinely extinguished in China following a standard method basically consisting of the following phases Smoothing the surface above the fire with heavy equipment to make it fit for traffic Drilling holes in the fire zone about 20 m apart down to the source of the fire following a regular grid Injecting water or mud in the boreholes long term usually 1 to 2 years Covering the entire area with an impermeable layer about 1 m thick e g of loess Planting vegetation to the extent the climate allows Efforts are underway to refine this method for example with additives to the quenching water or with alternative extinguishing agents Underground coal seam fires are customarily quenched by inertisation through mine rescue personnel Toward this end the affected area is isolated by dam constructions in the galleries Then an inert gas usually nitrogen is introduced usually making use of available pipelines In 2004 the Chinese government claimed success in extinguishing a mine fire at a colliery near Urumqi in China s Xinjiang province that had been burning since 1874 However a March 2008 Time magazine article quotes researcher Steven Q Andrews as saying I decided to go to see how it was extinguished and flames were visible and the entire thing was still burning They said it was put out and who is to say otherwise 15 A jet engine unit known as Gorniczy Agregat Gasniczy GAG was developed in Poland and successfully used for fighting coal fires and displacing firedamp in mines Current research and new developments in extinguishing fires editTime magazine reported in July 2010 that less expensive alternatives for extinguishing coal seam fires were beginning to reach the market including heat resistant grouts and a fire smothering nitrogen foam with other innovative solutions on the way 7 List of mine fires editSome of the more notable mine fires around the world are listed below Australia edit Burning Mountain a naturally occurring slow combusting underground coal seam it has been burning for over 5500 years Hill End Colliery fire a coal seam fire at Cessnock New South Wales that burned from at latest August 1930 to probably as late as June 1949 Blair Athol coal mine a mine near Clermont Queensland that has been the site of a number of fires one of which burned underground for 54 years Morwell Victoria the Great Morwell open cut mine caught fire in March 1902 and burned for over a month It was extinguished by breaching the nearby Morwell River with explosives to flood the mine The fire was found to have been caused by sabotage from incendiary devices 16 17 Hazelwood Power Station a 2 km coal face in the Hazelwood open cut mine was set alight by a bushfire in October 2006 18 and again in February 2014 19 Thousands of residents were affected by the fire at the Hazelwood coal mine in 2014 which burned for 45 days sending smoke across the community of Morwell in Victoria 20 Government advised the vulnerable groups of people in South Morwell to relocate temporarily due to the danger of PM2 5 particulate matter In May 2020 the Hazelwood Power Corporation was fined 1 56 million for occupational health and safety breaches associated with the fire 21 Canada edit Elkford British Columbia 22 Merritt British Columbia Carmacks Yukon Smoking Hills Northwest TerritoriesChina edit In China the world s largest coal producer with an annual output around 2 5 billion tons coal fires are a serious problem It has been estimated that some 10 200 million tons of coal uselessly burn annually and that the same amount again is made inaccessible to mining 10 Coal fires extend over a belt across the entire north China whereby over one hundred major fire areas are listed each of which contains many individual fire zones They are concentrated in the provinces of Xinjiang Inner Mongolia and Ningxia Beside losses from burned and inaccessible coal these fires contribute to air pollution and considerably increased levels of greenhouse gas emissions and have thereby become a problem which has gained international attention France edit nbsp Outcrops of pyrometamorphic rocks porcelanites from 17th century s coal seam fires at Mont Salson Saint Etienne FranceIn Saint Etienne coal basin five burning hills montagnes de feu have been described from the late 16th Century to the early 19th century around the city of Saint Etienne 23 24 Some of these fires were reported burning for 3 centuries Most of them are extinguished in 1785 25 These old burning hills correspond today to the Mont Salson Bois d Avaize and Cote Chaude in Saint Etienne la colline du Brule in la Ricamarie and Le mont du Feu Mount of fire in Genilac The fire in Genilac lasted 30 years from 1740 24 Outcrops of pyrometamorphic rocks generated by these fires are visible today on Mont Salson and bois d Avaize Germany edit In Planitz now a part of the city of Zwickau a coal seam that had been burning since 1476 was only quenched in 1860 26 27 In Dudweiler Saarland a coal seam fire ignited around 1668 and is still burning 28 This so called Burning Mountain Brennender Berg soon became a tourist attraction and was even visited by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 29 Also well known is the so called Stinksteinwand stinking stone wall in Schwalbenthal on the eastern slope of the Hoher Meissner where several seams caught fire centuries ago after lignite coal mining ceased combustion gas continues to reach the surface 30 India edit In India as of 2010 68 fires were burning beneath a 58 square mile 150 km2 region of the Jharia coalfield in Dhanbad Jharkhand Mine fires started in this region in 1916 and are rapidly destroying the only source of prime coking coal in the country 31 Indonesia edit Coal and peat fires in Indonesia are often ignited by forest fires near deposits at the surface It is difficult to determine when a forest fire is started by a coal seam fire or vice versa 6 The most common cause of forest fires and haze in Indonesia is intentional burning of forest to clear land for plantation crops of pulp wood rubber and palm oil No accurate count of coal seam fires has been completed in Indonesia Only a minuscule fraction of the country has been surveyed for coal fires 6 The best data available come from a study based on systematic on the ground observation In 1998 a total of 125 coal fires were located and mapped within a 2 kilometer strip either side of a 100 kilometer stretch of road north of Balikpapan to Samarinda in East Kalimantan using hand held Global Positioning System GPS equipment Extrapolating this data to areas on Borneo and Sumatra underlain by known coal deposits it was estimated that more than 250 000 coal seam fires may have been burning in Indonesia in 1998 12 Land clearing practices which use fire often starting forest fires may be the cause of coal seam fires in Indonesia In 1982 and 1983 one of the largest forest fires in this century raged for several months through an estimated 5 million hectares of Borneo s tropical rainforests Goldammer and Seibert however concluded that there are indications that coal seam fires already occurred between 13 200 and 15 000 BP 32 A fire season usually occurs every 3 to 5 years when the climate in parts of Indonesia becomes exceptionally dry from June to November due to the El Nino Southern Oscillation off the west coast of South America Since 1982 fire has been a recurring feature on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra burning large areas in 1987 1991 1994 1997 1998 2001 and 2004 12 In October 2004 smoke from land clearing again covered substantial portions of Borneo and Sumatra disrupting air travel 33 increasing hospital admissions 34 and extending to portions of Brunei Singapore and Malaysia 35 Coal outcrops are so common in Indonesia it is virtually certain these fires ignited new coal seam fires New Zealand edit Burnett s Face West Coast Strongman Mine West Coast Wangaloa Otago 36 Pike River Mine West Coast Millerton area Stockton Mine West Coast South Island New ZealandNorway edit In 1944 Longyearbyen Mine 2 on Svalbard was set alight by sailors from the German battleship Tirpitz on its final sortie outside of Norwegian coastal waters The mine continued to burn for 20 years while some of the areas were subsequently mined from the reconstructed Mine 2b South Africa edit Transvaal and Delagoa Bay Collieries near Emalahleni formerly known as Witbank Mpumalanga has been burning since the mine was abandoned in 1953 37 United States edit nbsp Clinker exposed by a cutting for a road through Willow Creek Canyon Carbon County Utah nbsp Close up showing fused rock in a clinker nbsp Wall of clinker in a roadcutMany coalfields in the US are subject to spontaneous ignition The federal Office of Surface Mining OSM maintains a database AMLIS which in 1999 listed 150 fire zones In mid 2010 according to OSM more than 100 fires were burning beneath nine states most of them in Colorado Kentucky Pennsylvania Utah and West Virginia Some geologists say that many fires go unreported so that the actual number of them may be nearer to 200 across 21 states 7 In Pennsylvania 45 fire zones are known the most famous being the Centralia mine fire in the Centralia mine in the hard coal region of Columbia County which has been burning since 1962 7 Burning Mine near Summit Hill caught fire in 1859 38 In Colorado coal fires have arisen as a consequence of fluctuations in the groundwater level which can increase the temperature of the coal up to 300 C enough to cause it to spontaneously ignite citation needed The Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana contains some 800 billion tons of brown coal and the Lewis and Clark Expedition 1804 to 1806 reported fires there Fires have been a natural occurrence in this area for about three million years and have shaped the landscape For example an area about 4 000 square kilometres in size is covered with coal clinker some of it in Theodore Roosevelt National Park where there is a spectacular view of fiery red coal clinker from Scoria Point 39 Laurel Run Pennsylvania 40 New Castle Colorado Glenwood Springs Colorado Lotts Creek Kentucky Ruth Mullins Kentucky Truman Shephard Kentucky New Straitsville Ohio San Toy Ohio Smoky Mountain in Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument Utah Sego Utah Vanderbilt Pennsylvania Centralia Pennsylvania Carbondale Pennsylvania The coal seam fire beneath Marshall Mesa in Boulder Colorado was investigated as a possible cause of the 2021 Marshall Fire 41 In popular culture editThe 1991 film Nothing but Trouble directed and co written by Dan Aykroyd features a town Valkenvania that has an underground coal fire that has been burning for decades The judge of the town references the constantly burning coal mine fire as the source of his hatred of financiers In the TV show Scorpion Season 3 Episode 23 the Scorpion team extinguishes an underground coal fire in Wyoming See also editThe Darvaza gas crater a burning natural gas deposit in Turkmenistan Underground coal gasification Oil well fire Fumarole mineralReferences edit Rein G 2013 Smouldering Fires and Natural Fuels In Belcher C M et al eds Fire Phenomena and the Earth System An Interdisciplinary Guide to Fire Science Wiley and Sons pp 15 34 Heffern E L amp Coates D A 2004 Geologic history of natural coal bed fires Powder River basin USA International Journal of Coal Geology 59 1 2 25 47 Bibcode 2004IJCG 59 25H doi 10 1016 j coal 2003 07 002 Zhang X Kroonenberg S B amp De Boer C B 2004 Dating of coal fires in Xinjiang north west China Terra Nova 16 2 68 74 Bibcode 2004TeNov 16 68Z doi 10 1111 j 1365 3121 2004 00532 x S2CID 59475840 Ellyett C D amp Fleming A W 1974 Thermal infrared imagery of the Burning Mountain coal fire Remote Sensing of Environment 3 1 79 86 Bibcode 1974RSEnv 3 79E doi 10 1016 0034 4257 74 90040 6 a b Song Z amp Kuenzer C 2014 Coal fires in China over the last decade A comprehensive review International Journal of Coal Geology 133 72 99 Bibcode 2014IJCG 133 72S doi 10 1016 j coal 2014 09 004 a b c Whitehouse Alfred amp Mulyana Asep A S 2004 Coal Fires in Indonesia International Journal of Coal Geology Amsterdam Elsevier 2012 1 2 91 97 p 95 Bibcode 2004IJCG 59 91W doi 10 1016 j coal 2003 08 010 ISSN 0166 5162 a b c d Cray Dan 23 July 2010 Deep Underground Miles of Hidden Wildfires Rage Time Archived from the original on 28 July 2010 Kuenzer C Stracher G B 2012 Geomorphology of coal seam fires Geomorphology 138 1 209 222 a b c Krajick Kevin 1 May 2005 Fire in the Hole Smithsonian pp 54ff Retrieved 16 January 2007 a b Rennie David 1 February 2002 How China s scramble for black gold is causing a green disaster The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 30 April 2010 Zhang J Wagner W Prakash A Mehl H amp Voigt S 2004 Detecting coal fires using remote sensing techniques International Journal of Remote Sensing 25 16 3193 3220 Bibcode 2004IJRS 25 3193Z doi 10 1080 01431160310001620812 S2CID 140197767 a b c Hamilton Michael S Miller Richard O amp Whitehouse Alfred E 2000 The Continuing Fire Threat in Southeast Asia Environmental Science amp Technology 34 February 82A 85A Song S Kuenzer C Zhang Z Jia Y Sun Y amp Zhang J 2015 Detecting coal fires using remote sensing techniques International Journal of Coal Geology 141 91 102 doi 10 1016 j coal 2015 03 008 nabu aachen land de Bergehalden im Aachener Revier Is Beijing Manipulating Air Pollution Statistics Time 14 March 2008 retrieved 17 March 2008 Coal mine fired by incendiary The Advertiser 1 April 1902 A coal mine on fire The Advertiser 2 April 1902 Massive coal mine blaze still burning The Age 13 October 2006 Report of the Hazelwood Mine Fire Inquiry 2014 Archived from the original on 5 March 2020 Retrieved 9 February 2016 Morwell coalmine fire finally extinguished after 45 days The Guardian 25 March 2014 Retrieved 22 April 2014 Hazelwood mine operators fined 1 9 million over blaze that burned for 45 days ABC 19 May 2020 If you drive 40km North of Elkford on the east side of the Elk River you will find the burning coal seam Elkford Chamber of Commerce Archived from the original on 21 July 2010 Retrieved 16 August 2015 Historique des mines de houille du departement de la Loire par E Leseure 1901 p 26 27 a b Memoire sur la topographie exterieure et souterraine du territoire houiller de Saint Etienne et de Rive de Gier Louis Beaunier 1817 p 143 Essai sur la lithologie des environs de Saint Etienne en Forez De Bournon 1785 from p 23 Peschke Norbert 1998 Planitz im Wandel der Zeiten Planitz Through the Ages in German Sutton Verlag GmbH p 18 ISBN 978 3 89702 016 0 Der Planitzer Erdbrand The coal seam fire of Planitz Was Ist Was in German Archived from the original on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 3 October 2016 Das Naturdenkmal Brennender Berg bei Dudweiler The natural monument Burning Mountain in Dudweiler Mineralienatlas in German Retrieved 3 October 2016 Fell Gunter Goethe in German Retrieved 3 October 2016 Der Berg Meissner in German Gemeinde Meissner Retrieved 3 October 2016 An der Stinksteinwand in der Nahe des Gasthauses Schwalbenthal stromen im Ubrigen seit 300 Jahren durch die Klufte des Basaltes die Gase eines schwelenden Kohleflozes aus Mine fires India Agence Vu Archived from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 15 June 2012 Goldammer J G Seibert B 1989 Natural rain forest fires in Eastern Borneo during the Pleistocene and Holocene Naturwissenschaften November 1989 Volume 76 Issue 11 p 518 520 Haze disrupts flights in Central Kalimantan The Jakarta Post 17 October 2004 1 Haze thick over Kalimantan The Jakarta Post 19 October 2004 1 Haze thickens in Sumatra and Kalimantan affects Malaysia The Jakarta Post 16 October 2004 1 Coal Mine Restoration in New Zealand Geology Department University of Otago New Zealand 1 September 2004 Archived from the original on 16 October 2008 Retrieved 19 December 2012 Limpitlaw D Aken M Lodewijks H amp Viljoen J 13 July 2005 Sustainable Development in the life of coal mining in South Africa Report South African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy p 3 Summit Hill in The Columbia Viking Desk Encyclopedia 1953 New York Viking North Dakota s Clinker Retrieved 16 August 2015 Laurel Run Archived from the original on 25 September 2021 Retrieved 16 August 2015 https assets bouldercounty gov wp content uploads 2023 06 marshall fire investigative summary pdf pp 10 11Further reading editKuenzer C Zhang J Tetzlaff A van Dijk P Voigt S Mehl H Wagner W 2007 Uncontrolled coal fires and their environmental impacts Investigating two arid mining regions in north central China Applied Geography 27 42 62 doi 10 1016 j apgeog 2006 09 007 Satellites track the fires raging beneath India New Scientist 18 July 2006 pp 25ff Retrieved 16 January 2007 Kuenzer C Stracher G 2011 Geomorphology of Coal Seam Fires Geomorphology 138 1 209 222 Bibcode 2012Geomo 138 209K doi 10 1016 j geomorph 2011 09 004 Van Dijk P Zhang J Jun W Kuenzer C Wolf W H 2011 Assessment of the contribution of in situ combustion of coal to greenhouse gas emission based on a comparison of Chinese mining information to previous remote sensing estimates International Journal of Coal Geology 86 1 108 119 Bibcode 2011IJCG 86 108V doi 10 1016 j coal 2011 01 009 Zhang J Kuenzer C 2007 Thermal surface characteristics of coal fires 1 Results of in situ measurements Journal of Applied Geophysics 63 3 4 117 134 Bibcode 2007JAG 63 117Z doi 10 1016 j jappgeo 2007 08 002 Zhang J Kuenzer C Tetzlaff A Oettl D Zhukov B Wagner W 2007 Thermal characteristics of coal fires 2 Results of measurements on simulated coal fires Journal of Applied Geophysics 63 3 4 135 147 Bibcode 2007JAG 63 135Z doi 10 1016 j jappgeo 2007 08 003 Kuenzer C Hecker C Zhang J Wessling S Wagner W 2008 The potential of multi diurnal MODIS thermal bands data for coal fire detection International Journal of Remote Sensing 29 3 923 944 Bibcode 2008IJRS 29 923K doi 10 1080 01431160701352147 S2CID 129522775 Kuenzer C Zhang J Li J Voigt S Mehl H Wagner W 2007 Detection of unknown coal fires synergy of coal fire risk area delineation and improved thermal anomaly extraction International Journal of Remote Sensing 28 20 4561 4585 Bibcode 2007IJRS 28 4561K doi 10 1080 01431160701250432 S2CID 129927653 Wessling S Kuenzer C Kesselsf W Wuttke M 2008 Numerical modelling to analyze underground coal fire induced thermal surface anomalies International Journal of Coal Geology 74 175 184 doi 10 1016 j coal 2007 12 005 Kuenzer C Zhang J Sun Y Jia Y Dech S 2012 Coal fires revisited the Wuda coal field in the aftermath of extensive coal fire research and accelerating extinction activities International Journal of Coal Geology 102 75 86 doi 10 1016 j coal 2012 07 006 Vallero Daniel Letcher Trevor 2012 Unraveling Environmental Disasters Amsterdam Elsevier Academic Press ISBN 978 0123970268 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coal seam fires The Status of Mine Fire Research in the United States The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2008 Encyclopedia of Earth Coal fires Encyclopedia of Earth Coalfire and remote sensing Coal fires A natural or man made hazard site about coal mine fires from Anupma Prakash of the Univ of Alaska Fairbanks Fighting Infernos Underground Popular Mechanics September 1951 pp 124 130 Earth on Fire Discover Seeking Cures in Kentucky Coal Mines Newsweek Link to video UK Looks for Natural Products in Kentucky s Unique Environments Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coal seam fire amp oldid 1190055169, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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