9 Mile is a large village in the Markham Valley of Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea. It lies along the Highlands Highway 9 miles (14 km) from the center of Lae between the foothills of the Atzera Range and the Markham River. The Atzera Range starts at Bugandi and runs adjacent to the Markham River has an elevation of 280 meters above sea level.[1][2] northwest of Lae, 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) southeast of Nadzab. The landscape is typically lowland rainforest.[3]
9 Mile | |
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Village | |
Coordinates: 6°35′41″S 146°52′37″E / 6.59472°S 146.87694°E | |
Country | Papua New Guinea |
Province | Morobe Province |
District | Huon District |
LLG | Wampar LLG |
Time zone | UTC+10 (AEST) |
Geography
editAnticlines in the vicinity of Lae, such as the Atzera Range and hills near Situm, appear to indicate that the Ramu-Markham Fault (which follows the northern edge of the Markham Valley) changes dip close to the surface from a steep ramp to a shallow fault, breaching the surface south of Lae.[4]
The Lae Seismic Zone has been identified between the Atzera Range and Situm[5] which has the potential to generate shallow Mw~7.0 earthquakes and landslides around the Atzera Range.[4] The possibility of major landsides in this area has increased as a result of human modification to the natural vegetation cover through clearing and gardening.[6]
History
editBefore the construction of the Highlands Highway, a road in the Atzera foothills in the Markham Valley connected Nadzab with Lae and a rough trail on the other side of the Atzeras paralleled this road from Lae to Yalu. Edward's Plantation was located around 5 Mile, Heath's Plantation around 6 Mile, Lane's Plantation and Whittaker's Plantation around 9 Mile and Jensen's Plantation around 10 Mile.[7] On 10 September the 25th Australian Infantry Brigade moved East from Nadzab towards Lae along the Atzera foothills often with fierce battles through these plantations while the 9th Division approached Lae from the East. On 16 September both units converged on Lae[8]
National Agricultural Research Institute
editThe National Agricultural Research Institute (NARI) conducts and fosters applied and development oriented research in the agriculture and rural development sectors in Papua New Guinea and is responsible for providing analytical, diagnostic and advisory services and up-to-date information to the agriculture sector in PNG. With its headquarters at Bubia, Ten Mile outside Lae, NARI's regional research and development co-ordination centers are located at Aiyura in Eastern Highlands Province, Tambul in Western Highlands Province, Laloki in Central Province, Bubia in Morobe Province, Keravat in East New Britain Province. The NARI's livestock research and development centre is at Labu in Morobe Province and the Chemistry Laboratory at Kilakila in Port Moresby.[9]
Atzera Hills Project
editIn 1978 the Human Ecology Programme of the Department of Minerals and Energy, assisted by the UNEP and Unesco (Man and the Biosphere MAB Project 11) and in co-operation with the Lae City Council, instigated the Atzera Hills Project, described as an ecologically sound management system to arrest the rapid deterioration and loss of productive capacity of 600 ha of Atzera Hills.[10]
The Atzera project folded after only three years despite efforts to train and raise awareness on the benefits of charcoal, the uptake in PNG households was minimal.[11]
Heavy rains in 2005 resulted in the Morobe administration highlighting the vulnerability of the city to the weather and recommending that a major rehabilitation programme be started immediately to reforest the surrounding hills behind the city to prevent soil erosion. This problem has been exacerbated as a result of the increased number of squatter settlements.[12]
Bubia Lutheran Primary School
editNotes
editReferences
edit- ^ "Atzera Range". GeoView. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
- ^ "Atzera Range". TravelsRadiate. Archived from the original on 2014-03-04. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
- ^ Kobayashi, Shigeo (2001). Rehabilitation of Degraded Tropical Forest Ecosystems: Workshop Proceedings, 2-4 November 1999, Bogor, Indonesia. CIFOR. p. 148. ISBN 978-979-8764-70-7.
- ^ a b Richard Stanaway; Laura Wallace; Zebedee Sombo; Johnson Peter; Trevor Palusi; Ben Safomea; John Nathan (12–15 August 2009). "Lae, a City caught between two plates – 15 years of Deformation Measurements with GPS" (PDF). Focus on Challenges; Society-Space-Surveyors. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
- ^ Kulig, Christopher; McCaffrey, Robert; Abers, Geoffrey A.; Letz, Horst (November 1993). "Shallow seismicity of arc-continent collision near Lae, Papua New Guinea". Tectonophysics. 227 (1–4): 81–93. Bibcode:1993Tectp.227...81K. doi:10.1016/0040-1951(93)90088-2.
- ^ Tau, Asigau. "Lae – Nabzad Development Plan Using Gis". Secretariat of the Pacific Community. Archived from the original on 5 March 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
- ^ "Series T504, U.S. Army Map Service". Home > Finding Information > PCL Map Collection > New Guinea AMS Topographic Maps. University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 4 March 2014.
- ^ Miller (jnr), John. "Chapter XI The Markham Valley and the Huon Peninsula". Hyperwar. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
- ^ "Youth and Agriculture". pngagrinews. 2011-10-06. Retrieved 6 Sep 2014.
- ^ Dube, V.N. (1983). "Firewood Cropping, Food Cultivation, and Conservation Planting: A Three-Dimensional Strategy for Displaced Rural Communities: The Case of the Atzera Hills, Lae, Papua New Guinea" (PDF). Mountain Research and Development. 3 (4): 422–428. doi:10.2307/3673051. JSTOR 3673051. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
- ^ Murphy, MEG (2009). What is free about fuelwood? A critique of the value of fuelwood in the rural and squatter settlement households in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea. PhD thesis, Southern Cross University.
- ^ "PNG'S Lae in Need of Major Rehabilitation". Post Courier. 7 September 2005. Archived from the original on 4 March 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2014.