Skip to Content
Advertisement
History

When Canaries Actually Worked in Coal Mines

These feathery gas detectors became beloved pets in the dark depths

Mining foreman R. Thornburg shows a small cage with a canary used for testing carbon monoxide gas in 1928. Credit: George McCaa, U.S. Bureau of Mines / Wikimedia Commons.

The canary in a coal mine is more than a metaphor—for nearly a century, this bright yellow songbird saved lives around the world by alerting miners of deadly harms deep underground. 

Featured Video

There, hazardous gases including methane, carbon dioxide, and carbon monoxide can form, the latter of which can kill people within two hours, even at low levels. Canaries are particularly sensitive to carbon monoxide, and they show hints of distress before humans do, swaying and fainting as they fall ill. That’s because they’re so tiny and have a super efficient respiratory system, breathing in twice as much gas with each breath compared with us. In some cases, miners revived the birds by supplying them with oxygen. 

Mining companies in countries including the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom began employing canaries as gas detectors around the early 20th century. A few decades earlier, coal mining had taken off as steam-powered train lines grew around the globe, but deadly accidents forced coal companies to come up with safety measures. 

This type of cage, equipped with oxygen supply, was used to revive canaries exposed to harmful gases in mines. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

To test for dangerous gases, these companies initially had workers carry flames around mines, but this risked explosions. In 1906, mine workers in England used canaries to carefully enter a mine after an explosion, and a few years later, a U.K. law required workers to “bring two small, caged birds” down into the mines with them. Around this time, the U.S. Bureau of Mines tested a whole host of critters for the job, including guinea pigs, chickens, dogs, and pigeons. But the canaries performed best. 

Canaries also aided in rescues—in the case of explosions or fires, they warned rescuers of hazardous conditions. 

Read more: “In the Land of the Eyeless Dragons”

They weren’t hard to get. In the United Kingdom, for example, mining companies often sourced them from pet shops or private breeders. Most of these working birds had color imperfections or other features seen as flaws that made them less likely to be bought by the public, and females were typically cheaper due to their “poor singing ability.” Some mining companies even built aviaries in their offices to breed these birds.

Workers often treated these avian assistants like beloved pets, whistling to them in the dark depths of the mines. A newspaper article printed in Scotland in 1926 claimed the birds were “well looked after.”

But miners began to say goodbye to these feathery friends as electronic sensors, invented in the mid-1920s, took their place. Compared with other countries, the U.K. ended the practice relatively late: On this day in 1986, the British government announced a plan to phase out canaries from mining pits. “New electronic detectors will replace the bird because they are said to be cheaper in the long run and more effective in indicating the presence of pollutants in the air otherwise unnoticed by miners,” the BBC wrote

Canaries carried on similar duties sporadically in the decades that followed. For instance, people fearing chemical weapon attacks in Baghdad and New York in the early 2000s bought up these birds. 

Today, canaries are primarily proverbial in this context. But the songbirds’ sacrifices, of course, live on in the saying.

Enjoying  Nautilus? Subscribe to our free newsletter.

Lead image: George McCaa, U.S. Bureau of Mines / Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

Related Stories

This Was a Big Week for Marie Curie, More Than 120 Years Ago

Despite steep odds, she became the first woman in France to earn a doctorate in science

June 26, 2026

Today Was the Day Galileo Caved

On this day almost four centuries ago, the father of modern science was forced to bow to political and religious pressure to save his life

June 22, 2026

The Model for Botticelli’s Venus Died at 23

And researchers have a new theory for her untimely demise

June 17, 2026

This Cosmonaut Was the First Woman in Space

The Soviet Union beat the United States to the punch by 20 years

June 16, 2026

The Ancient Roots of Modern Winemaking

Two-thousand-year-old grape seeds yield viticultural insight in the Chianti wine region

June 12, 2026

274 Years Ago Today, Benjamin Franklin Flew a Kite

But a Frenchman beat him to the electric punch by a month

June 10, 2026