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Gas emissions, tars, and secondary minerals at the Ruth Mullins and Tiptop coal mine fires

August 1, 2018

Both the Tiptop and Ruth Mullins coal fires, Kentucky, were reinvestigated in 2009 and 2010. The Tiptop fire was not as active in 2009 and may have been on the path to burning out at the time of the 2009 visit. The Ruth Mullins coal mine fire, Perry County, Kentucky, has been the subject of several field investigations, including November 2009–February 2010 investigations in which we measured gas emissions, collected minerals and tars, and characterized the nature of the fire. Vents exhibiting the greatest gas flux (>100,000 mg/s/m2) are those with the largest amount of condensate minerals and tars. Vents with moderate gas flux (10,000–100,000 mg/s/m2) are less likely to contain condensate minerals, but are collocated with tars, and vents with the lowest flux (

Publication Year 2018
Title Gas emissions, tars, and secondary minerals at the Ruth Mullins and Tiptop coal mine fires
DOI 10.1016/j.coal.2018.06.012
Authors Jennifer O’Keefe, Erika Neace, Maxwell Hammond, James C. Hower, Mark Engle, Joseph East, Nicholas J. Geboy, Ricardo Olea, Kevin R. Henke, Gregory Copley, Edward Lemley, Rachel Hatch Nally, Antonia Hansen, Allison Richardson, Anne Satterwhite, Glenn Stracher, Larry Radke, Charles Smeltzer, Christopher Romanek, Donald Blake, Paul Schroeder, Stephen Emsbo-Mattingly, Scott Stout
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title International Journal of Coal Geology
Index ID 70198632
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Eastern Energy Resources Science Center
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