Peat.

—As a fuel, peat has been used very little in the United States on account of the abundance of the better grades of fuel, but in many parts of the country it is used locally to a considerable extent. In peat bogs from which the fuel is taken, the peat is formed from grasses and sedges which in time produce a carbonaceous mass that becomes sufficiently dense to be taken out in sections, with a long narrow spade. The peat is then built into piles where after drying it is ready to be burned.