Page:Transactions of the Natural History Society of Northumberland, Durham, and Newcastle-upon-Tyne 1838 Vol.2.djvu/446

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400
Mr. Johnston's Description and Analysis of Hatchetine, &c.

appears that several of them should be occasionally present in the air which circulates through mines of bituminous coal.
The common fire damp requires, for its perfect combustion, ten times its bulk, the vapour of Faraday's light liquid thirty times, and that of naphtha forty-five times its bulk of common air. A very small portion of either of the latter, therefore, would render an atmosphere dangerous. The sudden outburst of a small reservoir of any one of the more dense forms of this compound of carbon and hydrogen would pollute a working previously considered safe, and give rise to an explosion where none was considered possible. In a district of country like the north of England, where rich bituminous coal is so abundant, where mines are worked at the very verge of the inflammable state, and where the most serious accidents from explosions occasionally occur, it is of importance, I think, that the probable presence of such substances, in the state of vapour, should be taken into account. Where the coal is richer than usual, and where troubles occur in which these compounds, as at Urpeth, may exist in a liquid or solid state, a more rapid escape of combustible matter may be anticipated, while the probability of such escape affords a rational explanation of those sudden and unexpected emissions of gaseous matter which have occasionally been followed by consequences so disastrous.
Durham, August, 1837.