- Coal measure
The Coal Measures is a lithostratigraphical term used mainly in the
British Isles for the coal-bearing part of the UpperCarboniferous System. It represents the remains of fluvio-deltaic sediment, and consists mainly of clastic rocks (claystone s,shale s,siltstone s,sandstone s, conglomerates) interstratified with the beds ofcoal . In most places, the Coal Measures are underlain by coarser clastic sequences known as Millstone Grit, of Namurian age. The top of the Coal Measures may be marked by a non-sequence, the overlying rocks beingPermian or later in age. In some parts of Britain, however, the Coal Measures grade up into mainly coal-barren red-beds of late Westphalian and possibly Stephanian age..Citation | last =Rayner
first =D H
author-link =
last2 =Hemingway
first2 =J E
author2-link =
publication-date =1974
date =
year =
title =The Geology and Mineral Resources Of Yorkshire
edition =
volume =
series =
publication-place =Leeds
place =
publisher =Yorkshire Geological Society
id =
isbn =
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url =
accessdate =] Citation | last =Edwards
first =W
author-link =
last2 =Trotter
first2 =F M
author2-link =
publication-date =1954
date =
year =
title =The Pennines and Adjacent Areas
edition =Third
volume =
series =British Regional Geology
publication-place =London
place =
publisher =HMSO. Natural Environment Research Council
id =
isbn =
doi =
oclc =
url =
accessdate =]The Coal Measures formed during Westphalian and earliest Stephanian times in the
Europe an ('Heerlen') chronostratigraphical scheme (which is approximately equivalent to the MiddlePennsylvanian Series of theIUGS global chronostratigraphical scheme).The term coal measures has also historically been used in other parts of the world for coal-bearing successions of various ages, e.g. the
Permian coal measures ofAustralia and the lateCretaceous and earlyTertiary coal measures found inNew Zealand . However, these useages are mostly informal.ee also
*
Coal
*Coal mining References
Further reading
* CJ Cleal and BA Thomas, "Plants of the British Coal Measures", The Palaeontological Association, 1994.
* CJ Cleal and BA Thomas, "British Upper Carboniferous stratigraphy", Chapman & Hall, London, 1995.
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