Same here.I have walked all over that area in the past three weeks and saw nothing.
The reason I laughed Guy is I thought you responding to the post right above yours from Mark.I have walked all over that area in the past three weeks and saw nothing.
That is very insteresting to me. They called it "the stuff" . If it's in an advanced stage far on its way to being anthracite, did it surpass bituminous already, which takes 100 to 300 millions of years to form? From a government site: "Lignite is crumbly and has high moisture content, which contributes to its low heating value".Ha, Centralia in the Pine Barrens? How 'bout this lignite article from January 03, 1885, excerpted from the May's Landing Record (p3, v8, n13)?
S-M
As I understand, lignite seams can burn underground just like coal seams. That said, I highly doubt this could happen here. The Egg Harbor City material is probably Legler lignite, a lignitic clay named for the hamlet just above the Air Station at Lakehurst. It is a middle-Miocene Cohansey formation deposit. You can see a photo of it in an exposure on Fig. 5 of Sugarman et al. (2016, Bedrock Geologic Map of the Lakehurst Quadrangle, Ocean County, New Jersey). The peaty material as shown is interpreted as a salt-water-marsh deposit within a barrier island sequence—That is very insteresting to me. They called it "the stuff" . If it's in an advanced stage far on its way to being anthracite, did it surpass bituminous already, which takes 100 to 300 millions of years to form? From a government site: "Lignite is crumbly and has high moisture content, which contributes to its low heating value".
I suppose the opinion that "a larger deposit exists further down" was spoken by the butcher, who gives an opinion on everything, and he is usually ignored.
Just having some fun with it Mark, but it is an interesting article.