“…Causes of thermal maturity in coal, such as igneous intrusions heating the strata, may also be accompanied by trace element‐carrying hydrothermal fluids percolating through coals, precipitating as pyrite. Dissolved metals in fluids can enhance Se and Te content of coals and have been suggested for Carboniferous coals in Ayrshire (Bullock et al, ) and Jurassic coals in Brora (Bullock et al, ). The close proximity of the South Wales, Cumberland, and Northumberland coalfields to granitic intrusions (e.g., Shap and Skiddaw granites of Cumberland, Dartmoor granite in southwest England, Weardale granite in northeast England), associated deformation which produced a series of faults through the coal strata (forming cleat systems), or later Variscan activity (in the case of South Wales), may have provided a source and/or flow pathway for hot metal‐rich fluids and subsequent increased maturity and trace element enrichment to these coals (see also Gayer et al, ; Turner & Richardson, ).…”