<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1><SPAN name="THE_INDUSTRIAL_READERS" id="THE_INDUSTRIAL_READERS"></SPAN>THE INDUSTRIAL READERS</h1>
<h3>BOOK II</h3>
<h1>DIGGERS IN THE<br/> EARTH</h1>
<h4>BY</h4>
<h2>EVA MARCH TAPPAN, <span class="smcap">Ph</span>.D.</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="I" id="I"></SPAN>I</h2>
<h3>IN A COAL MINE</h3>
<p>Did you ever wonder how beds of coal happened
to be in the earth? This is their story.</p>
<p>Centuries ago, so many thousand centuries that
even the most learned men can only guess at their
number, strange things were coming to pass. The
air was so moist and cloudy that the sun's rays had
hard work to get through. It was warm, nevertheless,
for the crust of the earth was not nearly so
thick as it is now, and much heat came from the
earth itself. Many plants and trees grow best in
warm, moist air; and such plants flourished in those
days. Some of their descendants are living now, but
they are dwarfs, while their ancestors were giants.
There is a little "horse-tail" growing in our meadows,
and there are ferns and club mosses almost everywhere.
These are some of the descendants; but
many of their ancestors were forty or fifty feet high.
They grew very fast, especially in swamps; and when
they died, there was no lack of others to take their
places. Dead leaves fell and heaped up around them.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</SPAN></span>
Stumps stood and decayed, just as they do in our
forests to-day. Every year the soft, black, decaying
mass grew deeper. As the crust of the earth was so
thin, it bent and wrinkled easily. It often sank in
one place and rose in another. When these low,
swampy places sank, water rushed over them, pressing
down upon them with a great weight and sweeping
in sand and clay. Now, if you burn a heap of
wood in the open air, the carbon in the wood burns
and only a pile of ashes remains. "Burning" means
that the carbon in the wood unites with the oxygen
gas in the air. If you cover the wood before you
light it, so that only a little oxygen reaches it, much
of the carbon is left, in the form of charcoal.</p>
<p>When wood decays, its carbon unites with the
oxygen of the air; and so decay is really a sort of
burning. In the forests of to-day the leaves, and at
length the trees themselves, fall and decay in the
open air; but at the time when our coal was forming,
the water kept the air away, and much carbon was
left. This is the way coal was made. Some of the
layers, or strata, are fifty or sixty feet thick, and
some are hardly thicker than paper. On top of each
one is a stratum of sandstone or dark-gray shale.
This was made by the sand and mud which were
brought in by the water. These shaly rocks split
easily into sheets and show beautiful fossil impressions
of ferns. There are also impressions of the
bark and fruit of trees, together with shells, crinoids,
corals, remains of fishes and flying lizards, and some
few trilobites,—crablike animals with a shell somewhat<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</SPAN></span>
like the back of a lobster, but marked into
three divisions or lobes, from which its name comes.</p>
<p>Since the crust of the earth was so thin and yielding,
it wrinkled up as the earth cooled, much as the
skin of an apple wrinkles when the apple dries. This
brought some of the strata of coal to the surface,
and after a while people discovered that it would
burn. If a vein of coal cropped out on a man's farm,
he broke some of it up with his pickaxe, shoveled it
into his wheelbarrow, and wheeled it home. After
a while hundreds of thousands of people wanted
coal; and now it had to be mined. In some places
the coal stratum was horizontal and cropped out on
the side of a hill, so that a level road could be dug
straight into it. In other places the coal was so near
the surface that it could be quarried under the open
sky, just as granite is quarried. Generally, however,
if you wish to visit a coal mine, you go to a shaft, a
square, black well sometimes deeper than the height
of three or four ordinary church steeples. You get
into the "cage," a great steel box, and are lowered
down, down, down. At last the cage stops and you
are at the bottom of the mine. The miners' faces,
hands, overalls, are all black with coal dust. They
wear tiny lamps on their caps, and as they come
near the walls of coal, it sparkles as it catches the
light. Here and there hangs an electric lamp. It is
doing its best to give out light, but its glass is thick
with coal dust. The low roof is held up by stout
wooden timbers and pillars of coal. A long passageway
stretches off into a blacker darkness than you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</SPAN></span>
ever dreamed of. Suddenly there is a blaze of red
light far down the passage, a roar, a medley of all
sorts of noises,—the rattling of chains, the clattering
of couplings, the shouts of men, the crash of coal
falling into the bins. It is a locomotive dragging its
line of cars loaded with coal. In a few minutes it
rushes back with empty cars to have them refilled.</p>
<p>All along this passageway are "rooms," that is,
chambers which have been made by digging out the
coal. Above them is a vast amount of earth and
rock, sometimes hundreds of feet in thickness. There
is always danger that the roof will cave in, and so
the rooms are not made large, and great pillars of
coal are left to hold up the roof.</p>
<p>Not many years ago the miner used to do all the
work with his muscles; now machines do most of it.
The miner then had to lie down on his side near the
wall of coal in his "room" and cut into it, close to
the floor, as far as his pickaxe would reach. Then
he bored a hole into the top of the coal, pushed in a
cartridge, thrust in a slender squib, lighted it, and
ran for his life. The cartridge exploded, and perhaps
a ton or two of coal fell. The miner's helper shoveled
this into a car and pushed it out of the room to join
the long string of cars.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/image011.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="310" alt="HOW A COAL MINE LOOKS ABOVEGROUND" title="HOW A COAL MINE LOOKS ABOVEGROUND" />
<span class="caption">HOW A COAL MINE LOOKS ABOVEGROUND<br/><br/>
All that shows on the surface is the machinery shed where
the various engines work to keep the air fresh, and bring
up the miners and the coal.</span></p>
<p>That is the way mining used to be done. In these
days a man with a small machine for cutting coal
comes first. He puts his cutter on the floor against
the wall of coal and turns on the electricity. <i>Chip,
chip</i>, grinds the machine, eating its way swiftly into
the coal, and soon there is a deep cut all along the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</SPAN></span>
side of the room. The man and his machine go elsewhere,
and the first room is left for its next visitors.
They come in the evening and bore holes for the
blasting. Once these holes were bored by hand, but
now they are made with powerful drills that work
by compressed air. A little later other men come
and set off cartridges. In the morning when the
dust has settled and the smoke has blown away, the
loaders appear with their shovels and load the coal
into the cars. Then it is raised to the surface and
made ready for market.</p>
<p>Did you ever notice that some pieces of coal are
dull and smutty, while others are hard and bright?
The dull coal is called bituminous, because it contains
more bitumen or mineral pitch. This is often
sold as "run-of-mine" coal,—that is, just as it
comes from the mine, whether in big pieces or in
little ones; but sometimes it is passed over screens,
and in this process the dust and smaller bits drop
out.</p>
<p>The second kind of coal, the sort that is hard and
bright, is anthracite. Its name is connected with a
Greek word meaning ruby. It burns with a glow,
but does not blaze. Most of the anthracite coal is
used in houses, and householders will not buy it
unless the pieces are of nearly the same size and free
from dirt, coal dust, and slate. The work of preparation
is done in odd-shaped buildings called "breakers."
One part of a breaker is often a hundred or a
hundred and fifty feet in height. The coal is carried
to the top of the breaker. From there it makes a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</SPAN></span>
journey to the ground, but something happens to it
every little way. It goes between rollers, which
crush it; then over screens, through which the
smaller pieces fall. Sometimes the screens are so
made that the coal will pass over them, while the
thin, flat pieces of slate will fall through. In spite
of all this, bits of coal mixed with slate sometimes
slide down with the coal, and these are picked out
by boys. A better way of getting rid of them is now
coming into use. This is to put the coal and slate
into moving water. The slate is heavier than the
coal, and sinks; and so the coal can easily be separated
from it. Dealers have names for the various
sizes of coal. "Egg" must be between two and two
and five eighths inches in diameter; "nut" between
three fourths and one and one eighth inches; "pea"
between one half and three fourths of an inch.</p>
<p>Mining coal is dangerous work. Any blow of the
pickaxe may break into a vein of water which will
burst out and flood the mine. The wooden props
which support the roof may break, or the pillars of
coal may not be large enough; and the roof may fall
in and crush the workers. There are always poisonous
gases. The coal, as has been said before, was
made under water, and therefore the gas which was
formed in the decaying leaves and wood could not
escape. It is always bubbling out from the coal, and
at any moment a pickaxe may break into a hole that
is full of it. One kind of gas is called "choke-damp,"
because it chokes or suffocates any one who breathes
it. There is also "white-damp," the gas which you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</SPAN></span>
see burning with a pretty blue flame over a hot coal
fire. Worst of all is the "fire-damp." If you stir up
the water in a marsh, you will see bubbles of it rise
to the surface. It is harmless in a marsh, but quite
the opposite in a mine. When it unites with a certain
amount of air, it becomes explosive, and the
least bit of flame will cause a terrible explosion.
Even coal dust may explode if the air is full of it,
and it is suddenly set in motion by too heavy a blast
of powder.</p>
<p>Miners used to work by candlelight. Every one
knew how dangerous this was; but no one found any
better way until, about a hundred years ago, Sir
Humphry Davy noticed something which other
people had not observed. He discovered that flame
would not pass through fine wire gauze, and he made
a safety lamp in which a little oil lamp was placed
in a round funnel of wire gauze. The light, but not
the flame, would pass through it; and all safety
lamps that burn oil have been made on this principle.
The electric lamp, however, is now in general
use. The miner wears it on his cap, and between his
shoulders he carries a small, light storage battery.
Even with safety lamps, however, there are sometimes
explosions. The only way to make a mine at
all safe from dangerous gases is to keep it full of
fresh, pure air. There is no wind to blow through
the chambers and passages, and therefore air has
to be forced in. One way is to keep a large fire at
the bottom of the air shaft. If you stand on a stepladder,
you will feel that the top of the room is much<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span>
warmer than the floor. This is because hot air rises;
and in a mine, the hot air over the fire rises and sucks
the foul air and gas out of the mine, and fresh air
rushes in to take its place. Another way is by a
"fan," a machine that forces fresh air into the
mine.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="figcenter" style="width: 390px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/image015.jpg" width-obs="390" height-obs="600" alt="MINERS AND THEIR MINE" title="MINERS AND THEIR MINE" />
<span class="caption">MINERS AND THEIR MINE<br/><br/>
Notice the safety lamps in the men's caps, and the little railroad
on which the cars of coal and ore travel, hauled by the useful mule.</span></p>
<p>So it is that by hard work and much danger we
get coal for burning. Now, coal is dirty and heavy.
A coal fire is hard to kindle and hard to put out, and
the ashes are decidedly disagreeable to handle. And
after all, we do not really burn the coal itself, but
only the gas from it which results from the union of
carbon and oxygen. In some places natural gas, as
it is called, which comes directly from some storehouse
in the ground, is used in stoves and furnaces
and fireplaces for both heating and cooking; and
perhaps before long gas will be manufactured so
cheaply and can be used so safely and comfortably
that we shall not have to burn coal at all, but can
use gas for all purposes—unless electricity should
take its place.</p>
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