<h5 id="id00391">LECTURE VIII</h5>
<h5 id="id00392">THE HISTORY OF A PIECE OF COAL</h5>
<p id="id00393">I have here a piece of coal (Fig. 45), which, though it has been
cut with some care so as to have a smooth face, is really in no
other way different from any ordinary lump which you can pick for
yourself out of the coal-scuttle. Our work to-day is to relate
the history of this black lump; to learn what it is, what it has
been, and what it will be.</p>
<p id="id00394">It looks uninteresting enough at first sight, and yet if we
examine it closely we shall find some questions to ask even about
its appearance. Look at the smooth face of this specimen and see
if you can explain those fine lines which run across so close
together as to look like the edges of the leaves of a book. Try
to break a piece of coal, and you will find that it will split
much more easily along those lines than across the other way of
the lump; and if you wish to light a fire quickly you should
always put this lined face downwards so that the heat can force
its way up through these cracks and gradually split up the block.
Then again if you break the coal carefully along one of these
lines you will find a fine film of charcoal lying in the crack,
and you will begin to suspect that this black coal must have been
built up in very thin layers, with a kind of black dust between
them.</p>
<p id="id00395">The next thing you will call to mind is that this coal burns and
gives flame and heat, and that this means that in some way
sunbeams are imprisoned in it; lastly, this will lead you to
think of plants, and how they work up the strength of the
sunbeams into their leaves, and hide black carbon in even the
purest and whitest substance they contain.</p>
<p id="id00396">Is coal made of burnt plants, then? Not burnt ones, for if so it
would not burn again; but you may have read how the makers of
charcoal take wood and bake it without letting it burn, and then
it turns black and will afterwards make a very good fire; and so
you will see that it is probable that our piece of coal is made
of plants which have been baked and altered, but which have still
much sunbeam strength bottled up in them, which can be set free
as they burn.</p>
<p id="id00397">If you will take an imaginary journey with me to a coal-pit near
Newcastle, which I visited many years ago, you will see that we
have very good evidence that coal is made of plants, for in all
coal-mines we find remains of them at every step we take.</p>
<p id="id00398">Let us imagine that we have put on old clothes which will not
spoil, and have stepped into the iron basket (see Fig. 46) called
by the miners a cage, and are being let down the shaft to the
gallery where the miners are at work. Most of them will probably
be in the gallery b, because a great deal of the coal in a has
been already taken out. But we will stop in a because there we
can see a great deal of the roof and the floor. When we land on
the floor of the gallery we shall find ourselves in a kind of
tunnel with railway lines laid along it and trucks laden with
coal coming towards the cage to be drawn up, while empty ones are
running back to be loaded where the miners are at work. Taking
lamps in our hands and keeping out of the way of the trucks, we
will first throw the light on the roof, which is made of shale or
hardened clay. We shall not have gone many yards before we see
impressions of plants in the shale, like those in this specimen
(Fig. 47), which was taken out of a coal-mine at Neath in
Glamorganshire, a few days ago, and sent up for this lecture.
You will recognize at once the marks of ferns (a), for they look
like those you gather in the hedges of an ordinary country lane,
and that long striped branch (b) does not look unlike a reed, and
indeed it is something of this kind, as we shall see by-and-by.
You will find plenty of these impressions of plants as you go
along the gallery and look up at the roof, and with them there
will be others with spotted stems, or with stems having a curious
diamond pattern upon them, and many ferns of various kinds.</p>
<p id="id00399">Next look down at your feet and examine the floor. You will not
have to search long before you will almost certainly find a piece
of stone like that represented in Fig. 48, which has also come
from Neath Colliery. This fossil, which is the cast of a piece
of a plant, puzzled those who found it for a very long time. At
last, however, Mr. Binney found the specimen growing to the
bottom of the trunk of one of the fossil trees with spotted
stems, called Sigillaria; and so proved that this curious pitted
stone is a piece of fossil root, or rather underground stem, like
that which we found in the primrose, and that the little pits or
dents in it are scars where the rootlets once were given off.</p>
<p id="id00400">Whole masses of these root-stems, with ribbon-like roots lying
scattered near them, are found buried in the layer of clay called
the underclay which makes the floor of the coal, and they prove
to us that this underclay must have been once the ground in which
the roots of the coal-plants grew. You will feel still more sure
of this when you find that there is not only one straight gallery
of coal, but that galleries branch out right and left, and that
everywhere you find the coal lying like a sandwich between the
floor and the roof, showing that quite a large piece of country
must be covered by these remains of plants all rooted in the
underclay.</p>
<p id="id00401">But how about the coal itself? It seems likely, when we find
roots below and leaves and stems above, that the middle is made
of plants, but can we prove it? We shall see presently that it
has been so crushed and altered by being buried deep in the
ground that the traces of leaves have almost been destroyed,
though people who are used to examining with the microscope, can
see the crushed remains of plants in thin slices of coal.</p>
<p id="id00402">But fortunately for us, perfect pieces of plants have been
preserved even in the coal-bed itself. Do you remember our
learning in Lecture IV, that water with lime in it petrifies
things, that is, leaves carbonate of lime to fill up grain by
grain the fibres of an animal or plant as the living matter
decays, and so keeps an exact representation of the object?</p>
<p id="id00403">Now, it so happens that in a coal-bed at South Ouram, near
Halifax, as well as in some other places, carbonate of lime
trickled in before the plants were turned into coal, and made
some round nodules in the plant-bed, which look like cannon-
balls. Afterwards, when all the rest of the bed was turned into
coal, these round balls remained crystallized, and by cutting
thin transparent slices across the nodule we can distinctly see
the leaves and stems and curious little round bodies which make
up the coal. Several such sections may be seen at the British
Museum, and when we compare these fragments of plants with those
which we find above and below the coal-bed, we find that they
agree, thus proving that coal is made of plants, and of those
plants whose roots grew in the clay floor, while their heads
reached up far above where the roof now is.</p>
<p id="id00404">The next question is, what kind of plants were these? Have we
anything like them living in the world now? You might perhaps
think that it would be impossible to decide this question from
mere petrified pieces of plants. But many men have spent their
whole lives in deciphering all the fragments that could be found,
and though the section given in Fig. 49 may look to you quite
incomprehensible, yet a botanist can reed it as we read a book.
For example, at S and L, where stems are cut across, he can learn
exactly how they were build up inside, and compare them with the
stems of living plants, while the fruits cc and the little round
spores lying near them, tell him their history as well as if he
had gathered them from the tree. In this way we have learnt to
know very fairly what the plants of the coal were like, and you
will be surprised when I tell you that the huge trees of the
coal-forests, of which we sometimes find trunks in the coal-mines
from ten to fifty feet long, are only represented on the earth
now by small insignificant plants, scarcely ever more than two
feet, and often not many inches high.</p>
<p id="id00405">Have you ever seen the little club moss or Lycopodium which grows
all over England, but chiefly in the north, on heaths and
mountains? At the end of each of its branches it bears a cone
made of scaly leaves; and fixed to the inside of each of these
leaves is a case called a sporangium, full of little spores or
moss-seeds, as we may call them, though they are not exactly like
true seeds. In one of these club-mosses called Selaginella, the
cases near the bottom of the cone contain large spores, while
those near the top contain a powdery dust. These spores are full
of resin, and they are collected on the Continent for making
artificial lightning in the theatres, because they flare when
lighted.</p>
<p id="id00406">Now this little Selaginella is of all living plants the one most
like some of the gigantic trees of the coal-forests. If you look
at this picture of a coal-forest (Fig. 51), you will find it
difficult perhaps to believe that those great trees, with diamond
markings all up the trunk, hanging over from the right to the
left of the picture, and covering all the top with their boughs,
could be in any way relations of the little Selaginella; yet we
find branches of them in the beds above the coal, bearing cones
larger but just like Selaginella cones; and what is most curious,
the spores in these cones are of exactly the same kind and not
any larger than those of the club-mosses.</p>
<p id="id00407">These trees are called by botanists Lepidodendrons, or scaly
trees; there are numbers of them in all coal-mines, and one trunk
has been found 49 feet long. Their branches were divided in a
curious forked manner and bore cones at the ends. The spores
which fell from these cones are found flattened in the coal, and
they may be seen scattered about in the coal-ball.</p>
<p id="id00408" style="margin-top: 3em">Week 23</p>
<p id="id00409">Another famous tree which grew in the coal-forests was the one
whose roots we found in the floor or underclay of the coal. It
has been called Sigillaria, because it has marks like seals
(sigillum, a seal) all up the trunk, due to the scars left by the
leaves when they fell from the tree. You will see the
Sigillarias on the left-hand side of the coal-forest picture,
having those curious tufts of leaves springing out of them at the
top. Their stems make up a great deal of the coal, and the bark
of their trunks is often found in the clays above, squeezed flat
in lengths of 30, 60, or 70 feet. Sometimes, instead of being
flat the bark is still in the shape of a trunk, and the interior
is filled with sane; and then the trunk is very heavy, and if the
miners do not prop the roof up well it falls down and kills those
beneath it. Stigmaria is the root of the Sigillaria, and is
found in the clays below the coal. Botanists are not yet quite
certain about the seed-cases of this tree, but Mr. Carruthers
believes that they grew inside the base of the leaves, as they do
in the quillwort, a small plant which grows at the bottom of our
mountain lakes.</p>
<p id="id00410">But what is that curious reed-like stem we found in the piece of
shale (see Fig. 47)? That stem is very important, for it
belonged to a plant called a Calamite, which, as we shall see
presently, helped to sift the earth away from the coal and keep
it pure. This plant was a near relation of the "horsetail," or
Equisetum, which grows in our marshes; only, just as in the case
of the other trees, it was enormously larger, being often 20 feet
high, whereas the little Equisetum, Fig. 52, is seldom more than
a foot, and never more than 4 feet high in England, though in
tropical South America they are much higher. Still, if you have
ever gathered "horsetails," you will see at once that those trees
in the foreground of the picture (Fig. 51), with leaves arranged
in stars round the branches, are only larger copies of the little
marsh-plants; and the seed-vessels of the two plants are almost
exactly the same.</p>
<p id="id00411">These great trees, the Lepidodendrons, the Sigillarias, and the
Calamites, together with large tree-ferns, are the chief plants
that we know of in the coal-forests. It seems very strange at
first that they should have been so large when their descendants
are now so small, but if you look at our chief plants and trees
now, you will find that nearly all of them bear flowers, and this
is a great advantage to them, because it tempts the insects to
bring them the pollen-dust, as we saw in the last lecture.</p>
<p id="id00412">Now the Lipidodendrons and their companions had no true flowers,
but only these seed-cases which we have mentioned; but as there
were no flowering plants in their time, and they had the ground
all to themselves, they grew fine and large. By-and-by, however,
when the flowering plants came in, these began to crowd out the
old giants of the coal-forests, so that they dwindled and
dwindled from century to century till their great-great-
grandchildren, thousands of generations after, only lift up their
tiny heads in marshes and on heaths, and tell us that they were
big once upon a time.</p>
<p id="id00413">And indeed they must have been magnificent in those olden days,
when they grew thick and tall in the lonely marshes where plants
and trees were the chief inhabitants. We find no traces in the
clay-beds of the coal to lead us to suppose that men lived in
those days, nor lions, nor tigers, nor even birds to fly among
the trees; but these grand forests were almost silent, except
when a huge animal something like a gigantic newt or frog went
croaking through the marsh, or a kind of grasshopper chirruped on
the land. But these forms of life were few and far between,
compared to the huge trees and tangled masses of ferns and reeds
which covered the whole ground, or were reflected in the bosom of
the large pools and lakes round about which they grew.</p>
<p id="id00414">And now, if you have some idea of the plants and trees of the
coal, it is time to ask how these plants became buried in the
earth and made pure coal, instead of decaying away and leaving
behind only a mixture of earth and leaves?</p>
<p id="id00415">To answer this question, I must ask you to take another journey
with me across the Atlantic to the shores of America, and to land
at Norfolk in Virginia, because there we can see a state of
things something like the marshes of the coal-forests. All round
about Norfolk the land is low, flat, and marshy, and to the south
of the town, stretching far away into North Carolina, is a large,
desolate swamp, no less than forty miles long and twenty-five
broad. The whole place is one enormous quagmire, overgrown with
water-plants and trees. The soil is as black as ink from the
old, dead leaves, grasses, roots, and stems which lie in it; and
so soft, that everything would sink into it, if it were not for
the matted roots of the mosses, ferns, and other plants which
bind it together. You may dig down for ten or fifteen feet, and
find nothing but peat made of the remains of plants which have
lived and died there in succession for ages and ages, while the
black trunks of the fallen trees lie here and there, gradually
being covered up by the dead plants.</p>
<p id="id00416">The whole place is so still, gloomy, and desolate, that it goes
by the name of the "Great Dismal Swamp," and you see we have here
what might well be the beginning of a bed of coal; for we know
that peat when dried becomes firm and makes an excellent fire,
and that if it were pressed till it was hard and solid it would
not be unlike coal. If, then, we can explain how this peaty bed
has been kept pure from earth, we shall be able to understand how
a coal-bed may have been formed, even though the plants and trees
which grow in this swamp are different from those which grew in
the coal-forests.</p>
<p id="id00417">The explanation is not difficult; streams flow constantly, or
rather ooze into the Great Dismal Swamp from the land that lies
to the west, but instead of bringing mud in with them as rivers
bring to the sea, they bring only clear, pure water, because, as
they filter for miles through the dense jungle of reeds, ferns,
and shrubs which grow round the marsh, all the earth is sifted
out and left behind. In this way the spongy mass of dead plants
remains free from earthy grains, while the water and the shade of
the thick forest of trees prevent the leaves, stems, etc., from
being decomposed by the air and sun. And so year after year as
the plants die they leave their remains for other plants to take
root in, and the peaty mass grows thicker and thicker, while tall
cedar trees and evergreens live and die in these vast, swampy
forests, and being in loose ground are easily blown down by the
wind, and leave their trunks to be covered up by the growing moss
and weeds.</p>
<p id="id00418">Now we know that there were plenty of ferns and of large
Calamites growing thickly together in the coal-forests, for we
find their remains everywhere in the clay, so we can easily
picture to ourselves how the dense jungle formed by these plants
would fringe the coal-swamp, as the present plants do the Great
Dismal Swamp, and would keep out all earthy matter, so that year
after year the plants would die and form a thick bed of peat,
afterwards to become coal.</p>
<p id="id00419" style="margin-top: 3em">Week 24</p>
<p id="id00420">The next thing we have to account for is the bed of shale or
hardened clay covering over the coal. Now we know that from time
to time land has gone slowly up and down on our globe so as in
some places to carry the dry ground under the sea, and in others
to raise the sea-bed above the water. Let us suppose, then, that
the great Dismal Swamp was gradually to sink down so that the sea
washed over it and killed the reeds and shrubs. Then the streams
from the west would not be sifted any longer but would bring down
mud, and leave it, as in the delta of the Nile or Mississippi, to
make a layer over the dead plants. You will easily understand
that this mud would have many pieces of dead trees and plants in
it, which were stifled and died as it covered them over; and thus
the remains would be preserved like those which we find now in
the roof of the coal-galleries.</p>
<p id="id00421">But still there are the thick sandstones in the coal-mine to be
explained. How did they come there? To explain them, we must
suppose that the ground went on sinking till the sea covered the
whole place where once the swamp had been, and then sea-sand
would be thrown down over the clay and gradually pressed down by
the weight of new sand above, till it formed solid sandstone and
our coal-bed became buried deeper and deeper in the earth.</p>
<p id="id00422">At last, after long ages, when the thick mass of sandstones above
the bed b (Fig. 46) had been laid down, the sinking must have
stopped and the land have risen a little, so that the sea was
driven back; and then the rivers would bring down earth again and
make another clay-bed. Then a new forest would spring up, the
ferns, Calamites, Lepidodendrons, and Sigillarias would gradually
form another jungle, and many hundred of feet above the buried
coal-bed b, a second bed of peat and vegetable matter would begin
to accumulate to form the coal-bed a.</p>
<p id="id00423">Such is the history of how the coal which we now dig out of the
depths of the earth once grew as beautiful plants on the surface.
We cannot tell exactly all the ground over which these forests
grew in England, because some of the coal they made has been
carried away since by rivers and cut down by the waves of the
sea, but we can say that wherever there is coal now, there they
must have been then.</p>
<p id="id00424">Try and picture to yourselves that on the east coast of
Northumberland and Durham, where all is now black with coal-
dust, and grimy with the smoke of furnaces; and where the noise
of hammers and steam-engines, and of carts and trucks hurrying to
and fro, makes the country re-echo with the sound of labour;
there ages ago in the silent swamp shaded with monster trees, one
thin layer of plants after another was formed, year after year,
to become the coal we now value so much. In Lancashire, busy
Lancashire, the same thing was happening, and even in the middle
of Yorkshire and Derbyshire the sea must have come up and washed
a silent shore where a vast forest spread out over at least 700
or 800 square miles. In Stafford-shire, too, which is now almost
the middle of England, another small coal-field tells the same
story, while in South Wales the deep coal-mines and number of
coal-seams remind us how for centuries and centuries forests must
have flourished and have disappeared over and over again under
the sand of the sea.</p>
<p id="id00425">But what is it that has changed these beds of dead plants into
hard, stony coal? In the first place you must remember they have
been pressed down under an enormous weight of rocks above them.
We can learn something about this even from our common lead
pencils. At one time the graphite or pure carbon, of which the
blacklead (as we wrongly call it) of our pencils is made, was dug
solid out of the earth. but so much has now been used that they
are obliged to collect the graphite dust, and press it under a
heavy weight, and this makes such solid pieces that they can cut
them into leads for ordinary cedar pencils.</p>
<p id="id00426">Now the pressure which we can exert by machinery is absolutely
nothing compared to the weight of all those hundreds of feet of
solid rock which lie over the coal-beds, and which has pressed
them down for thousands and perhaps millions of years; and
besides this, we know that parts of the inside of the earth are
very hot, and many of the rocks in which coal is found are
altered by heat. So we can picture to ourselves that the coal
was not only squeezed into a solid mass, but often much of the
oil and gas which were in the leaves of the plants was driven out
by heat, and the whole baked, as it were, into one substance.
The difference between coal which flames and coal which burns
only with a red heat, is chiefly that one has been baked and
crushed more than the other. Coal which flames has still got in
it the tar and the gas and the oils which the plant stored up in
its leaves, and these when they escape again give back the
sunbeams in a bright flame. The hard stone coal, on the contrary,
has lost a great part of these oils, and only carbon remains,
which seizes hold of the oxygen of the air and burns without
flame. Coke is pure carbon, which we make artificially by driving
out the oils and gases from coal, and the gas we burn is part of
what is driven out.</p>
<p id="id00427">We can easily make coal-gas here in this room. I have brought a
tobacco-pipe, the bowl of which is filled with a little powdered
coal, and the broad end cemented up with Stourbridge clay. When
we place this bowl over a spirit-lamp and make it very hot, the
gas is driven out at the narrow end of the pipe and lights easily
(see Fig. 53). This is the way all our gas is made, only that
furnaces are used to bake the coal in, and the gas is passed into
large reservoirs till it is wanted for use.</p>
<p id="id00428">You will find it difficult at first to understand how coal can be
so full of oil and tar and gases, until you have tried to think
over how much of all these there is in plants, and especially in
seeds - think of the oils of almonds, of lavender, of cloves, and
of caraways; and the oils of turpentine which we get from the
pines, and out of which tar is made. When you remember these and
many more, and also how the seeds of the club-moss now are
largely charged with oil, you will easily imagine that the large
masses of coal-plants which have been pressed together and broken
and crushed, would give out a great deal of oil which, when made
very hot, rises up as gas. You may often yourself see tar oozing
out of the lumps of coal in a fire, and making little black
bubbles which burst and burn. It is from this tar that James
Young first made the paraffin oil we burn in our lamps, and the
spirit benzoline comes from the same source.</p>
<p id="id00429">From benzoline, again, we get a liquid called aniline, from which
are made so many of our beautiful dyes - mauve, magenta, and
violet; and what is still more curious, the bitter almonds, pear-
drops, and many other sweets which children like to well, are
actually flavoured by essences which come out of coal-tar. Thus
from coal we get not only nearly all our heat and our light, but
beautiful colours and pleasant flavours. We spoke just now of
the plants of the coal as being without beautiful flowers, and
yet we see that long, long after their death they give us lovely
colours and tints as beautiful as any in flower-world now.</p>
<p id="id00430">Think, then, how much we owe to these plants which lived and died
so long ago! If they had been able to reason, perhaps they might
have said that they did not seem of much use in the world. They
had no pretty flowers, and there was no one to admire their
beautiful green foliage except a few croaking reptiles, and
little crickets and grasshoppers; and they lived and died all on
one spot, generation after generation, without seeming to do much
good to anything or anybody. Then they were covered up and put
out of sight, and down in the dark earth they were pressed all
out of shape and lost their beauty and became only black, hard
coal. There they lay for centuries and centuries, and thousands
and thousands of years, and still no one seemed to want them.</p>
<p id="id00431">At last, one day, long, long after man had been living on the
earth, and had been burning wood for fires, and so gradually
using up the trees in the forests, it was discovered that this
black stone would burn, and from that time coal has been becoming
every day more and more useful. Without it not only should we
have been without warmth in our houses, or light in our streets
when the stock of forest-wood was used up; but we could never
have melted large quantities of iron-stone and extracted the
iron. We have proof of this in Sussex. The whole country is
full of iron-stone, and the railings of St. Paul's churchyard are
made of Sussex iron. Iron-foundries were at work there as long
as there was wood enough to supply them, but gradually the works
fell into disuse, and the last furnace was put out in the year
1809. So now, because there is no coal in Sussex, the iron lies
idle, while in the North, where the iron-stone is near the coal-
mines, hundreds of tons are melted out every day.</p>
<p id="id00432">Again, without coal we could have had no engines of any kind, and
consequently no large manufactories of cotton goods, linen goods,
or cutlery. In fact, almost everything we use could only have
been made with difficulty and in small quantities; and even if we
could have made them it would have been impossible to have sent
them so quickly all over the world without coal, for we could
have had no railways or steamships, but must have carried all
goods along canals, and by slow sailing vessels. We ourselves
must have taken days to perform journeys now made in a few hours,
and months to reach our colonies.</p>
<p id="id00433">In consequence of this we should have remained a very poor
people. Without manufactories and industries we should have had
to live chiefly by tilling the ground, and everyone being obliged
to toil for daily bread, there would have been much less time or
opportunity for anyone to study science, or literature, or
history, or to provide themselves with comforts and refinements
of life.</p>
<p id="id00434">All this then, those plants and trees of the far-off ages, which
seemed to lead such useless lives, have done and are doing for
us. There are many people in the world who complain that life is
dull, that they do not see the use of it, and that there seems no
work specially for them to do. I would advise such people,
whether they are grown up or little children, to read the story
of the plants which form the coal. These saw no results during
their own short existences, they only lived and enjoyed the
bright sunshine, and did their work, and were content. And now
thousands, probably millions, of years after they lived and died,
England owes her greatness, and we much of our happiness and
comfort, to the sunbeams which those plants wove into their
lives.</p>
<p id="id00435">They burst forth again in our fires, in our brilliant lights, and
in our engines, and do the greater part of our work; teaching us</p>
<p id="id00436"> "That nothing walks with aimless feet<br/>
That not one life shall be destroyed,<br/>
Or cast as rubbish to the void,<br/>
When God hath made the pile complete."<br/></p>
<p id="id00437">In Memoriam</p>
<p id="id00438" style="margin-top: 3em">Week 25</p>
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