Bovey Coal.—One of the most instructive deposits of brown coal in England, is that of Bovey Heathfield, near Chudleigh in Devonshire, which is of considerable thickness and extent, and presents all the characters of a true coal-field; namely, beds of carbonized vegetables, alternating with layers of clay and marl. The Bovey coal is in the state of bituminized wood, the vascular tissue (which is coniferous in the specimens that have come under my notice) being apparent. It is easily chipped or split, and leaves a considerable quantity of white ashes after combustion. The layers of coal vary in thickness from one foot to three feet; and there are eighteen or twenty in a depth of about 120 feet; this coal-field extends seven or eight miles. No leaves or fruits have been discovered; bitumen occurs both in the coal and in the intermediate clays. Calcareous spar, and iron pyrites, prevail in many of the strata. In some places this brown coal is covered by a bed of peat, in which trunks and cones of firs are imbedded. The whole series appears to have been a lacustrine deposit; probably formed in a lake, into whose basin rafts of pine forests were drifted by periodical land-floods. (Org. Rem. I. p. 327).

The brown-coal formations on the banks of the Rhine, present the same phenomena on a more extended scale, and complicated with changes induced by volcanic action. In Iceland, where at the present time forests are unknown, there are extensive deposits of lignite of a peculiar kind, termed surturbrand.

JET.—WEALDEN COAL.

Jet.—The beautiful substance called Jet, is a compact lignite, and the vascular tissue may be detected even in the most solid masses; when prepared in very thin slices, it appears of a rich brown colour by transmitted light, and the woody texture is visible to the naked eye. Jet is found in great purity and abundance in the cliffs of alum-shale on the Yorkshire coast, which were celebrated in the early centuries for the production of this substance. At Whitby and Scarborough extensive manufactories of ornaments and trinkets of jet are established. The sandstone cliffs near Whitby contain masses of a very compact variety, locally termed stone-jet. In the front of the cliff, on the north-west side of Haiburn Wyke, the stump of a tree was observed in an erect position, about three feet high, and fifteen inches in diameter; the roots traversed a bed of shale, and were in the state of coarse jet, but the trunk, which extended into the sandstone, was in part silicified, while other portions were decayed and had a sooty aspect.[47]

[47] Geological Survey of the Yorkshire Coast; by Rev. G. Young; 1828; p. 197.

Thin seams and layers, and nodular masses, as well as regular coal-fields of lignite, occur in the tertiary formations. At Castle Hill, near Newhaven, in Sussex (Wond. p. 239), a seam of lignite resembling the surturbrand of Iceland, a few inches thick, is interposed between strata of red marl in which are carbonized leaves of dicotyledonous trees.

At Alum Bay in the Isle of Wight, a layer of lignite occurs between the beds of vertical gravel and sand of that interesting locality.

Wealden Coal.—The Wealden formation, in some districts, contains layers of lignite, which alternate with finely laminated micaceous sandstones, marls, and clays, abounding in minute carbonized fragments of fern-leaves, with fresh-water shells, and entomostracous crustaceans. This series of strata so strikingly resembles in its general aspect the characters of a coal-field, that some years since extensive works were undertaken in Sussex, in the expectation that coal might be obtained of suitable quality for economical purposes. The search was unsuccessful, but the attempt deserves not the censure that was bestowed upon it, in the infancy of geological science;[48] for experience has since shown, that although the true coal-measures are only found beneath the Triassic and Permian formations, good combustible bituminous coal is not necessarily restricted to any period or series of strata, but may occur wherever the local conditions were favourable to the accumulation and bituminization of vegetable matter. In fact, the coal-fields of the north of Germany are of the Wealden epoch; and this coal more closely approaches in its chemical characters the black-coal of the ancient carboniferous formations, than any of the lignites and brown-coals of the tertiary strata. Some of the beds are highly bituminous, especially those of Schaumberg, and of the principality of Bückeburg, which may rank with the best English Newcastle coal; but those layers which are derived from coniferous trees and plants are more laminated, and somewhat resemble the brown-coal. These deposits have originated for the most part from carbonized conifers and cycads, with a few ferns and lycopodiaceæ, or club-mosses.

[48] See Sir J. F. W. Herschel's Discourse on Nat. Phil.

The brown-coal of Hohen-Warte by the Osterweld, is chiefly formed of the Abies Linkii, and Pterophyllum Lyellianum, whose leaves and twigs, closely impacted together, are generally of a brownish colour, have a glossy surface, and, when soaked in water, are perfectly flexible. The other modification of Wealden coal appears to have undergone a greater degree of pressure, and of exclusion from the atmosphere; no ligneous structure is apparent, but indistinct impressions of leaves are perceptible, and these are chiefly of ferns and club-mosses. This coal has probably resulted from an accumulation of plants of less firm texture, and more perishable, than those of which the former is composed.[49]