Robert C. Milici
United States Geological Survey
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International Journal of Coal Geology | 2000
Robert C. Milici
Abstract Much of the coal consumed in the US since the end of the last century has been produced from the Pennsylvanian strata of the Appalachian basin. Even though quantities mined in the past are less than they are today, this basin yielded from 70% to 80% of the nations annual coal production from the end of the last century until the early 1970s. During the last 25 years, the proportion of the nations coal that was produced annually from the Appalachian basin has declined markedly, and today it is only about 40% of the total. The amount of coal produced annually in the Appalachian basin, however, has been rising slowly over the last several decades, and has ranged generally from 400 to 500 million tons (Mt) per year. A large proportion of Appalachian historical production has come from relatively few counties in southwestern Pennsylvania, northern and southern West Virginia, eastern Kentucky, Virginia and Alabama. Many of these counties are decades past their years of peak production and several are almost depleted of economic deposits of coal. Because the current major consumer of Appalachian coal is the electric power industry, coal quality, especially sulfur content, has a great impact on its marketability. High-sulfur coal deposits in western Pennsylvania and Ohio are in low demand when compared with the lower sulfur coals of Virginia and southern West Virginia. Only five counties in the basin that have produced 500 Mt or more exhibit increasing rates of production at relatively high levels. Of these, six are in the central part of the basin and only one, Greene County, Pennsylvania, is in the northern part of the basin. Decline rate models, based on production decline rates and the decline rate of the estimated, “potential” reserve, indicate that Appalachian basin annual coal production will be 200 Mt or less by the middle of the next century.
Archive | 1994
Robert D. Hatcher; Donald J. Colquhoun; Donald T. Secor; Frederick A. Cook; William P. Dillon; Kim D. Klitgord; Peter Popenoe; Carl E. Merschat; Leonard S. Wiener; Robert C. Milici; Arthur E. Nelson; Robert E. Sheridan; Arthur W. Snoke
DNAG Transect E-5. Part of GSAs DNAG Continent-Ocean Transect Series, this transect contains all or most of the following: free-air gravity and magnetic anomaly profiles, heat flow measurements, geologic cross section with no vertical exaggeration, multi-channel seismic reflection profiles, tectonic kindred cross section with vertical exaggeration, geologic map, stratigraphic diagram, and an index map. All transects are on a scale of 1:500,000.
Fact Sheet | 2011
James L. Coleman; Robert C. Milici; Troy A. Cook; Ronald R. Charpentier; Mark Kirshbaum; Timothy R. Klett; Richard M. Pollastro; Christopher J. Schenk
Open-File Report | 2006
Robert C. Milici; Christopher S. Swezey
Fact Sheet | 2003
Robert C. Milici; Robert T. Ryder; Christopher S. Swezey; Ronald R. Charpentier; Troy A. Cook; Robert A. Crovelli; Timothy R. Klett; Richard M. Pollastro; Christopher J. Schenk
International Journal of Coal Geology | 2013
Robert C. Milici; Romeo M. Flores; Gary D. Stricker
Natural resources research | 2009
Robert C. Milici
Fact Sheet | 2012
Robert C. Milici; James L. Coleman; Elisabeth L. Rowan; Troy A. Cook; Ronald R. Charpentier; Mark A. Kirschbaum; Timothy R. Klett; Richard M. Pollastro; Christopher J. Schenk
Fact Sheet | 2010
James L. Coleman; Robert C. Milici; Christopher P. Garrity; William A. Rouse; Bryant Fulk; Stanley T. Paxton; Marvin M. Abbott; John L. Mars; Troy A. Cook; Christopher J. Schenk; Ronald R. Charpentier; Timothy R. Klett; Richard M. Pollastro; Geoffrey S. Ellis
Oil & Gas Journal | 2002
Robert C. Milici; Peter D. Warwick; Emil D. Attanasi; Craig J. Wandrey