Paleoenvironmental and Tectonic Controls in Coal-Forming Basins in the United States

Depositional and structural history of the Pennsylvania Anthracite region
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Published:January 01, 1986
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Gordon H. Wood, Jr., Thomas M. Kehn, Jane R. Eggleston, 1986. "Depositional and structural history of the Pennsylvania Anthracite region", Paleoenvironmental and Tectonic Controls in Coal-Forming Basins in the United States, Paul C. Lyons, Charles L. Rice
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The Pennsylvania Anthracite region contains numerous thick, extensive, low-sulfur coal beds of Pennsylvanian age. These coal beds are the result of the accumulation of swamp vegetation, and deposition of fine- to coarse-grained clastics in a terrestrial, rapidly sinking asymmetric basin, whose source area lay to the southeast of the Anthracite region. The beds in this basin were extensively folded and faulted in Permian-Triassic time as the strata above a basal décollement were thrust northwestward.
- alluvial plains
- anthracite
- Appalachian Plateau
- Appalachians
- biostratigraphy
- Carboniferous
- coal
- coal seams
- controls
- economic geology
- fluvial features
- folds
- Invertebrata
- Mauch Chunk Formation
- Mesozoic
- Mississippian
- North America
- organic residues
- Paleozoic
- Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvanian
- Permian
- Plantae
- Pottsville Group
- sedimentary petrology
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- structural controls
- synclines
- Triassic
- United States
- Upper Mississippian
- Valley and Ridge Province
- Llewellyn Formation