2016417 · In North Borneo the Chinese community set up a China Relief Fund, and by July 1937, when the next phase of the Sino-Japanese War broke out, had raised a total of $600,000. However, most of this money came from the merchant community, and the response of the majority of North Borneo Chinese was tepid. Even when news of the …
view more2020118 · Gemala Borneo Utama before mining activities are carried out? This research was conducted using Normaf's juridical approach which is a descriptive analysis of qualitative research. This study aims to describe what happened in the implementation of Gold Mine Exploitation on Romang Island, Southwest Maluku Regency by PT. Gemala …
view more3 · At the outbreak of World War II in the Pacific, the island of Borneo was divided into five territories: four in the north under the British - Sarawak, Brunei, Labuan (island), and British North Borneo (now Sabah); and the remainder and bulk of the island to the south under the jurisdiction of the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). Because of its oil …
view more2020224 · Mining In Indonesian Borneo, mining operations, mainly for coal, are small in area but have indirect impacts on road expansion and influx of people[1]; dynamics depend on oscillating demand[15]. Gold mining is gaining momentum in Sabah (Malaysian Borneo[16]. Primary cause of forest loss and/or severe degradation
view moreA Colonial Office report from 1950 noted that Malaya's rubber and tin-mining industries were the biggest dollar earners in the British Commonwealth. Malaya was the world’s top producer of rubber, accounting for 75 per cent of the territory's income, and its biggest employer, with tin accounting for 12–15 per cent of the country’s income ...
view moreWartime Borneo Ooi Keat Gin's The Japanese Occupation of Borneo, 1941-1945 extends the author's earlier work on the wartime events on that island. Ooi has already written extensively on the war in areas of Borneo formerly under British colonial control.2 A major addition of this monograph is to cover
view more2022630 · Once upon a time, Japan was known in the Western world as the “land of gold.” Gold mining in Japan actually dates back to at least the 8th century, and the country produced about 20% of the world’s gold output in the mid-17th century. The Sado Island Gold Mines, in particular, were central to Japanese gold production for many years.
view more202416 · The saga of gold mining The Dutch East India Company, guided by their economic agenda, sought to exploit these disparities, thus fortifying their hegemony. In 1818, the Dutch East India Company embarked on an expedition to exploit the untapped potential of Borneo's mines.
view moreBased on over 30 years' experiences in design, production and service of crushing and s
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