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Peat Resources, Condition of Deposition as Well as their Utilization, Hakaluki Haor, Moulvibazar and Sylhet District, Bangladesh

Received: 3 December 2014     Accepted: 25 December 2014     Published: 4 January 2015
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Abstract

The study area is the Hakaluki Haor which is the second largest wet land of Bangladesh. It spans over the districts of Moulvibazar and Sylhet in southeast Bangladesh. The study was focused in the exploration of peat reserve, reconstruction of the paleo-environment as well as the utilization of the peat resources. Peat is found randomly from 0.5 m to 7 m below the surface and 1 m to 11 m thickness at over 40 beels as well as small plain lands of 90 km2 area of Hakaluki Haor. The total reserve of peat is 282 million ton in wet condition and 112 million ton in dry condition. Peat bearing Hakaluki Haor is a low-lying wet land which geological term is synclinal depression. It may be a syncline between two anticlines which was filled with sediments as well as various plant materials derived from the hilly region (anticline) on both sides (west and east) of the Haor. On the other hand vegetation occurred in this depression as aquatic plants which might have been destroyed by large natural disasters or any tectonic reason. As environment dictates the characteristics and the source of sediments, various aspects of the sediment are indicators of condition of peat deposition. Peat has mainly industrial importance as a fuel for power production, traditionally used for cooking, domestic heating and in brick fields, also used as insulator in many industries, agricultural purposes, retaining moisture in soil, raw material in horticulture and colour industries etc. Power plants of about 100 MW capacities may be established in this region based on peat of Hakaluki Haor which may be continued more than one hundred years.

Published in International Journal of Science, Technology and Society (Volume 2, Issue 6)
DOI 10.11648/j.ijsts.20140206.18
Page(s) 210-215
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2015. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Haor, Beel, Deposition, Environment and Peat

References
[1] Masum, M. Haq, N, M. Sayem. A. M. Rana, R. M. Sheikh, R. M. and Paul, K, A. 2012: Report on Exploration of Peat at 4000 hectre area of Bijoynagar upazila, B, Baria district. GSB, Unpublished report
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  • APA Style

    Mohammed Masum, Mohammad Omer Faruk Khan, Md. Nazwanul Haque, Md. Faruk Hasan, Anwar Sadat Md. Sayem, et al. (2015). Peat Resources, Condition of Deposition as Well as their Utilization, Hakaluki Haor, Moulvibazar and Sylhet District, Bangladesh. International Journal of Science, Technology and Society, 2(6), 210-215. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijsts.20140206.18

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    ACS Style

    Mohammed Masum; Mohammad Omer Faruk Khan; Md. Nazwanul Haque; Md. Faruk Hasan; Anwar Sadat Md. Sayem, et al. Peat Resources, Condition of Deposition as Well as their Utilization, Hakaluki Haor, Moulvibazar and Sylhet District, Bangladesh. Int. J. Sci. Technol. Soc. 2015, 2(6), 210-215. doi: 10.11648/j.ijsts.20140206.18

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    AMA Style

    Mohammed Masum, Mohammad Omer Faruk Khan, Md. Nazwanul Haque, Md. Faruk Hasan, Anwar Sadat Md. Sayem, et al. Peat Resources, Condition of Deposition as Well as their Utilization, Hakaluki Haor, Moulvibazar and Sylhet District, Bangladesh. Int J Sci Technol Soc. 2015;2(6):210-215. doi: 10.11648/j.ijsts.20140206.18

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ijsts.20140206.18,
      author = {Mohammed Masum and Mohammad Omer Faruk Khan and Md. Nazwanul Haque and Md. Faruk Hasan and Anwar Sadat Md. Sayem and Md. Azhar Hossain Assistant Director},
      title = {Peat Resources, Condition of Deposition as Well as their Utilization, Hakaluki Haor, Moulvibazar and Sylhet District, Bangladesh},
      journal = {International Journal of Science, Technology and Society},
      volume = {2},
      number = {6},
      pages = {210-215},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ijsts.20140206.18},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijsts.20140206.18},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijsts.20140206.18},
      abstract = {The study area is the Hakaluki Haor which is the second largest wet land of Bangladesh. It spans over the districts of Moulvibazar and Sylhet in southeast Bangladesh. The study was focused in the exploration of peat reserve, reconstruction of the paleo-environment as well as the utilization of the peat resources. Peat is found randomly from 0.5 m to 7 m below the surface and 1 m to 11 m thickness at over 40 beels as well as small plain lands of 90 km2 area of Hakaluki Haor. The total reserve of peat is 282 million ton in wet condition and 112 million ton in dry condition. Peat bearing Hakaluki Haor is a low-lying wet land which geological term is synclinal depression. It may be a syncline between two anticlines which was filled with sediments as well as various plant materials derived from the hilly region (anticline) on both sides (west and east) of the Haor. On the other hand vegetation occurred in this depression as aquatic plants which might have been destroyed by large natural disasters or any tectonic reason. As environment dictates the characteristics and the source of sediments, various aspects of the sediment are indicators of condition of peat deposition. Peat has mainly industrial importance as a fuel for power production, traditionally used for cooking, domestic heating and in brick fields, also used as insulator in many industries, agricultural purposes, retaining moisture in soil, raw material in horticulture and colour industries etc. Power plants of about 100 MW capacities may be established in this region based on peat of Hakaluki Haor which may be continued more than one hundred years.},
     year = {2015}
    }
    

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  • TY  - JOUR
    T1  - Peat Resources, Condition of Deposition as Well as their Utilization, Hakaluki Haor, Moulvibazar and Sylhet District, Bangladesh
    AU  - Mohammed Masum
    AU  - Mohammad Omer Faruk Khan
    AU  - Md. Nazwanul Haque
    AU  - Md. Faruk Hasan
    AU  - Anwar Sadat Md. Sayem
    AU  - Md. Azhar Hossain Assistant Director
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    T2  - International Journal of Science, Technology and Society
    JF  - International Journal of Science, Technology and Society
    JO  - International Journal of Science, Technology and Society
    SP  - 210
    EP  - 215
    PB  - Science Publishing Group
    SN  - 2330-7420
    UR  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijsts.20140206.18
    AB  - The study area is the Hakaluki Haor which is the second largest wet land of Bangladesh. It spans over the districts of Moulvibazar and Sylhet in southeast Bangladesh. The study was focused in the exploration of peat reserve, reconstruction of the paleo-environment as well as the utilization of the peat resources. Peat is found randomly from 0.5 m to 7 m below the surface and 1 m to 11 m thickness at over 40 beels as well as small plain lands of 90 km2 area of Hakaluki Haor. The total reserve of peat is 282 million ton in wet condition and 112 million ton in dry condition. Peat bearing Hakaluki Haor is a low-lying wet land which geological term is synclinal depression. It may be a syncline between two anticlines which was filled with sediments as well as various plant materials derived from the hilly region (anticline) on both sides (west and east) of the Haor. On the other hand vegetation occurred in this depression as aquatic plants which might have been destroyed by large natural disasters or any tectonic reason. As environment dictates the characteristics and the source of sediments, various aspects of the sediment are indicators of condition of peat deposition. Peat has mainly industrial importance as a fuel for power production, traditionally used for cooking, domestic heating and in brick fields, also used as insulator in many industries, agricultural purposes, retaining moisture in soil, raw material in horticulture and colour industries etc. Power plants of about 100 MW capacities may be established in this region based on peat of Hakaluki Haor which may be continued more than one hundred years.
    VL  - 2
    IS  - 6
    ER  - 

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Author Information
  • Geological Survey of Bangladesh, 153 Pioneer Road, Shegunbagicha, Dhaka, Bangladesh

  • Geological Survey of Bangladesh, 153 Pioneer Road, Shegunbagicha, Dhaka, Bangladesh

  • Geological Survey of Bangladesh, 153 Pioneer Road, Shegunbagicha, Dhaka, Bangladesh

  • Geological Survey of Bangladesh, 153 Pioneer Road, Shegunbagicha, Dhaka, Bangladesh

  • Geological Survey of Bangladesh, 153 Pioneer Road, Shegunbagicha, Dhaka, Bangladesh

  • Geological Survey of Bangladesh, 153 Pioneer Road, Shegunbagicha, Dhaka, Bangladesh

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