Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Kakadu National Park' has mentioned 'Uranium' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The Ranger Uranium Mine, one of the most productive uranium mines in the world, is surrounded by the park.
Main article: Uranium mining in Kakadu National Park
The Ranger Uranium Mine
In 1953, uranium was discovered along the headwaters of the South Alligator River valley.
Thirteen small but rich uranium mines operated in the following decade, at their peak in 1957 employing over 150 workers.
Early in the 1970s large uranium deposits were discovered at Ranger, Jabiluka and Koongarra.
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.
Energy Resources of Australia (ERA) is the operator of the Ranger uranium mine.
The controversial Ranger Uranium mine, one of the world's most productive Uranium mines, is surrounded by the park, and presents a significant management challenge both now and into the future, with the question of how to safely contain low-level radioactive wastewater.
Mining has an obvious impact on the landscape, but only one operational uranium mine (Ranger) remains.
The town was built for the Uranium mine that was established prior to the founding of Kakadu National Park and provides infrastructure for the mine's workforce as well as the national park activities and tourism.
In addition to the uranium mine at Ranger, which is excised from the property, there is one other excised lease at Jabiluka which is located close to an important floodplain inside the park.
Mining xe2x80x93 management of abandoned small-scale uranium mining sites and monitoring the existing Ranger mine lease.
The future potential effects on the park of current uranium mining will require ongoing scrutiny;