Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Kakadu National Park' has mentioned 'Mining' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Contents 1 History 1.1 Background 1.2 The arrival of non-Indigenous people 1.2.1 Explorers 1.2.2 Buffalo hunters 1.2.3 Missionaries 1.2.4 Pastoralists 1.3 Mining 2 Climate 3 Flora 4 Fauna 4.1 Mammals 4.2 Birds 4.3 Reptiles 4.4 Frogs 4.5 Fish 4.6 Insects 5 Environmental problems and threats 6 Landforms 7 Aboriginal rock art sites 8 Human impacts 8.1 Fire management 8.2 Tourism 9 Park management 9.1 Park use fee 9.2 General facilities 9.3 Camp sites 10 Administrative status 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External links | WIKI |
Mining[edit] | WIKI |
A series of short mining booms followed. | WIKI |
The construction of the North Australia Railway line gave more permanency to the mining camps, and places such as Burrundie and Pine Creek became permanent settlements. | WIKI |
The mining camps and new settlements drew many Aboriginal people away from Kakadu. | WIKI |
The Ranger Uranium Environmental Inquiry (known as the Fox inquiry) recommended, among other things, that mining begin at the Ranger site, that consideration be given to the future development of the Jabiluka and Koongarra sites, and that a service town be built (Fox et al. | WIKI |
Aboriginal people express varying opinions about mining. | WIKI |
Mining has an obvious impact on the landscape, but only one operational uranium mine (Ranger) remains. | WIKI |
Some past land degradation from small-scale mining and over-stocking that occurred in the area that was included in the property in 1992 has been addressed through restoration measures. | UNESCO |
There are mining interests adjacent to the property, and the long-term aspects of waste disposal and eventual recovery required ongoing attention and scrutiny. | UNESCO |
Mining xe2x80x93 management of abandoned small-scale uranium mining sites and monitoring the existing Ranger mine lease. | UNESCO |
The future potential effects on the park of current uranium mining will require ongoing scrutiny; | UNESCO |