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72
COAL.
induced to work with any other tool than a crowbar, with which they produce an altogether dispropor­tionate amount of small coal and dust. The pillar and stall is generally practised in preference to the long wall system of "getting" the coal. None of the mines are of great depth, and a perfect freedom from fire and choke damp render it possible to carry on the work without its being necessary to adopt the pre­cautions which in England only too often fail to secure the object aimed at. Many of the seams are of considerable thickness; one which is worked contains nearly 40 feet of coal. As a rule, however, the thick seams, especially those in the lower measures, do not contain the best coal. Compared with ordinary English coal, the Ranigunj coals, and Indian coals generally, are very much inferior in working power. Still they are capable of generating steam in both locomotive and other engines. In 1868 the total amount of coal raised in the Ranigunj mines was 564,933 tons; but in 1872 the total amount was only 322,443 tons.
I quote the following from the resolution on the subject by the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal for the year 1879 :—
The year was a prosperous one for the coal companies of Ranigunj. There was a large demand, and production was greatly stimulated. The output is estimated to have been 523,097 tons against 467,924 tons, the average of the three previous years. The number of persons employed was 388,931 men, 194,647 women, and 27,277 children.
The coal, which is fairly representative of Indian coals, may be described as a non-caking bituminous coal, composed of distinct lamina; of a bright jetty and of a dull, more earthy rock.