Earth:Illawarra Coal Measures
From HandWiki
The Illawarra Coal Measures is a group of sedimentary rocks occurring in the Sydney Basin in eastern Australia . This stratum is up to 150 metres thick. Formed in the Late Permian, it comprises shale, quartz-lithic sandstone, conglomerate rocks, and chert, with sporadically carbonaceous mudstone, coal and seams of torbanite.[1] Coal mining of these measures remains a significant commercial enterprise to the present day.[2] One of the abandoned coal mines in the Blue Mountains is now a tourist attraction.
See also
- Sydney Basin
- Hawkesbury sandstone
- Mittagong Formation
- Ashfield Shale
- Narrabeen group
References
- ↑ "Illawarra Coal Measures". Geo Science Australia. Australian Government. http://dbforms.ga.gov.au/pls/www/geodx.strat_units.sch_full?wher=stratno=27802.
- ↑ Hartcher, Chris. "NSW GOVERNMENT WELCOMES US$845 MILLION INVESTMENT IN ILLAWARRA COAL". Media Release. NSW Government. http://www.resources.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0006/436164/120622_Minister-Hartcher-med-rel-Illawarra-Coal.pdf.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illawarra Coal Measures.
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