Was all Coal made at the same time? (2024)

Was all Coal made at the same time or not is an ongoing debate with coal geologists.

Steve Mould discusses his opinion on why almost all the coal in the world was made at the same time.

Mould suggests most of the coal on earth was created during a single short period of geological history 300 million years ago. It’s called the carboniferous period. Watch Mould below to find out why coal production stopped so abruptly.

Dr Judy Bailey, a coal geologist, and coal and sedimentary petrologist, addresses the question: Is coal still being formed today?

Is the process that is at the origin of coal still existent, why or why not, and where does proof of it exist? Is it correct that today’s fungi that attack the wood substance lignin did not exist in the Carboniferous period and explains the existence of coal?— Ban

Most of us rarely pick up a piece of coal these days, but if you do find a lump of the black rock, you’ll be holding a piece of geological history.

“In general, a high quality black coal seam would take millions of years, if not hundreds of millions of years to form” says Dr Judy Bailey, coal geologist at the Discipline of Earth Science University of Newcastle

The process of coal formation is still taking place today, says Bailey.

“The precursor to coal is called peat, and that is just uncompressed plant matter.”

Peat accumulates in wet swampy environments known as mires, and that process is taking place today in areas such as Indonesia and even the Antiplano in the Andes.

“Mires are swamps with trees growing in them, swamps with reeds, stagnant water into which pollen and plant matter fall, and coastal lagoons. Peat can even form in the highlands in rain-fed or glacier-fed lakes in mountain ranges.”

However, peat accumulates very slowly at about one millimetre a year on average, says Bailey, although it can happen faster, up to 2 to 3 millimetres per year in the tropics. At that rate, it would take about 12,000-60,000 years to accumulate enough peat to form a three-metre coal seam.

The transformation from peat to coal takes even longer. It generally starts with burial of the peat by other sediments as a result of a volcanic eruption, migration of a river or a change in sea level.

“The pressure of overlying sediment squeezes the water out and causes the peat to compress,” says Bailey. The thickness of the peat will be decreased by about ten to one during this process.

The transformation from a plant substance to a metamorphic rock really starts once the peat is buried beneath 3 — 4 kilometres of sediment. At this depth, with an average rate of temperature increase of 30°C per kilometre, the temperature rises to over 100°C and sets off chemical reactions that transform the material into coal.

“The chemical reactions release volatiles,” says Bailey, “They help to compress the peat even more and it changes from being a plant substance, like lignin or cellulose, to a geopolymer that contains concentrated carbon. It’s very different from peat or plant matter.”

The amount of transformation from peat to coal is described by a coal’s rank.

“Brown coal and lignite are the lowest rank, then bituminous or black coal. As the temperature and pressure rises even more it changes to anthracite. And eventually some of the earliest coals that would have formed have been metamorphosed into graphite.”

The Carboniferous and fungi
The formation of coal seams really kicked off with the diversification of land-based plants around 350 million years ago.

“That was pretty much from the end of the Devonian into the Carboniferous period. Algae was around long before then in shallow seas, so there are coals made completely of algae that date back earlier than the Carboniferous.”

The Carboniferous period (300-360 MA) saw the evolution of tall lycopod trees that accelerated the rate at which peat could be formed in tropical equatorial mires. High sea levels and a warmer climate also encouraged coal formation, by extending the area of coastal mires and other wetlands.

Last year, researchers suggested that the evolution of white rot fungi — the fungus that breaks down plant lignin — at the end of the Carboniferous period may have slowed down coal formation. But Bailey disagrees with this theory.

“Coal formation underwent a drastic change at the end of the Carboniferous period, but for other reasons,” she says.

“There was a global ice age at the end of the Carboniferous, and the continents were drifting to new locations, so coal accumulation occurred in cold temperate places, closer to the poles.

“The cold favoured a new type of plant called Glossopteris, dominated by gnarly little trees which lost their leaves in winter.

“Plants grow more slowly in the cold, so this could have slowed peat accumulation, but frozen plant matter is less easily decayed and better preserved. It would be hard to distinguish any change in peat accumulation rate due to white rot fungi from the effects that climate change were having on peat.”

Peat continued to accumulate strongly throughout the Permian (245-300 MA), when coalfields in the Hunter, Newcastle and Illawarra were forming. However it paused for a period at the Permian — Triassic boundary.

“Coal formation did stop for about 15 million years at the end of the Permian,” says Bailey, “but this was due to a global extinction which wiped out most land plants. About 90 per cent of all species on Earth were wiped out at this time.”

Once the plants recovered, coal formation began again. This started with the recovery of spore-generated ferns, and a global “fern-spike”. Land plants were unusually dominated by ferns until other plants regenerated.

While the coal-forming process is still happening today, we interrupt that process when we mine coal, particularly of lower rank. If we left lower rank brown coal for a few more million years it would turn into black coal.

“Coal takes longer to form than any other rock type,” says Bailey.

Ironically, warming of the Earth’s climate may increase the number of swampy coastal environments that are perfect for coal formation. But these coal seams won’t be ready for a few million years.

“Industrial use of fossil fuels producing carbon dioxide faster than the ocean can dissolve it or plants store it, will regenerate tropical coal-forming conditions.

“This is a typical feedback cycle that regenerates the planet over geological time scales, but does not happen on a fast enough timescale to make dependence on fossil fuels sustainable for humankind right now.”

Planting trees for carbon capture
A final thought on planting trees for carbon capture. In a forest, when a tree dies, another tree grows in its place recapturing the carbon. But also, it takes a very long time to release the CO₂. Like hundreds of years. So in terms of tackling climate change which is a problem of human time scales, it’s a useful endeavour.

Post Tagged with carbon capture, coal, Steve Mould

Was all Coal made at the same time? (2024)

FAQs

Was all Coal made at the same time? ›

The Carboniferous

Carboniferous
The name Carboniferous means "coal-bearing", from the Latin carbō ("coal") and ferō ("bear, carry"), and refers to the many coal beds formed globally during that time.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Carboniferous
coal beds provided much of the fuel for power generation during the Industrial Revolution and are still of great economic importance. Most of the coal was formed during the Carboniferous period. The reasons for the same are: Abundance of Lignin: The appearance of wood tissue and bark-bearing trees.

Was all coal made at the same time? ›

Most of the coal on earth was created during a single short period of geological history 300 million years ago. It's called the carboniferous period.

When was all coal created? ›

The bulk of the coal driving the Industrial Revolution and contributing to global warming today has been deposited during the Carboniferous period (359–299 million years ago), resulting in a significant drawdown of atmospheric carbon dioxide at that time.

How did all the coal in the world form? ›

Coal contains the energy stored by plants that lived hundreds of millions of years ago in swampy forests. Layers of dirt and rock covered the plants over millions of years. The resulting pressure and heat turned the plants into the substance we call coal.

Was coal once wood? ›

Instead, trunks and branches would fall on top of each other, and the weight of all that heavy wood would eventually compress those trees into peat and then, over time, into coal.

Will coal ever form again? ›

Because coal takes millions of years to develop and there is a limited amount of it, it is a nonrenewable resource. The conditions that would eventually create coal began to develop about 300 million years ago, during the Carboniferous period. During this time, Earth was covered in wide, shallow seas and dense forests.

Did we run out of coal? ›

According to the World Coal Association, there are an estimated 1.1 trillion tonnes of coal reserves across the world. At our current rates of production and consumption, there is enough coal to last us 150 years. By around 2168, coal will be no more (unless we discover new deposits which push that date back).

How many years of coal is left? ›

World Coal Reserves

The world has proven reserves equivalent to 133.1 times its annual consumption. This means it has about 133 years of coal left (at current consumption levels and excluding unproven reserves).

Why did they stop burning coal? ›

Coal is the most carbon-intensive fossil fuel, therefore phasing it out is critical to limiting climate change as laid out in the Paris Agreement. The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that coal is responsible for over 30% of the global average temperature increase above pre-industrial levels.

How old is the oldest coal? ›

The first coal deposits were laid during the Carboniferous period, between 358.9 million years ago and 298.9 million years ago. Within this period, the early Mississippian period from 358.9 to 346.7 Mya, was when the first coal deposits were being laid.

Who made the first coal? ›

Archeological evidence in China indicates surface mining of coal and household usage after approximately 3490 BC. The earliest reference to the use of coal in metalworking is found in the geological treatise On stones (Lap.

Can coal be artificially created? ›

The fermentation residue is subject to a hydrothermal carbonization process in an aqueous solution at a temperature and at a pressure sufficient to form a synthetic coal solid and a liquid component.

When did coal stop being made? ›

"Coal formation did stop for about 15 million years at the end of the Permian," says Bailey, "but this was due to a global extinction which wiped out most land plants. About 90 per cent of all species on Earth were wiped out at this time." Once the plants recovered, coal formation began again.

Does coal grow back? ›

We can't make more in a short time. Tat is why coal is called nonrenewable. Over millions of years, the plants were buried under water and dirt. Te United States has more coal reserves than any other country in the world.

Why don't we burn wood instead of coal? ›

“At the smokestack,” says Sami Yassa, a senior scientist with NRDC's Climate & Clean Energy Program, “wood emits more carbon dioxide than coal for every unit of electricity produced.” In fact, the Partnership for Policy Integrity, a U.S.-based group that advocates for data-driven environmental policies, finds that ...

What was coal originally before it was heated and pressurized? ›

COAL IS A FOSSIL FUEL

As the plants died, they sank to the bottom of the swamps. Over the years, thick layers of plants were covered by dirt and water. Tey were packed down by the weight. After a long time, the heat and pressure changed the plants into coal.

What is the oldest type of coal? ›

When burned, anthracite can reach a very high temperature. In addition, anthracite is usually the oldest type of coal, having formed from biomass that was buried 350 million years ago.

When were coal seams created? ›

1.1 Introduction

Coal seams were formed over millions of years (50–300 million) by the biochemical decay and metamorphic transformation of the original plant material. The process known as “coalification” produces large quantities of by-product gases.

What is the oldest piece of coal? ›

The fossil record

Anthracite (the highest coal rank) material, which appears to have been derived from algae, is known from the Proterozoic Eon (approximately 2.5 billion to 541 million years ago) of Precambrian time.

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