
Anthracite is the highest rank of coal. It has been exposed to enough heat and pressure that most of the oxygen and hydrogen have been driven off, leaving a high-carbon material behind. It has a bright, lustrous appearance and breaks with a semi-conchoidal fracture. It is often referred to as “hard coal”; however, this is a layman’s term and has little to do with the hardness of the rock. The specimen shown above is about two inches (five centimeters) across.