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The Jayawijaya Mountains, formerly known as the Orange Range, are the eastern mountain range of the Maoke Mountains in the central highlands region of the Indonesian part of New Guinea. The range extends for 370 kilometres (230 mi) east of the Sudirman Range to the Star Mountains. Its highest point is Puncak Mandala at 4,760 metres (15,617 ft).
School colors Founded Closed Ateneo de Tuguegarao (currently, University of Saint Louis Tuguegarao) Tuguegarao: 1945: 1962 Ateneo de San Pablo (currently, Liceo de San Pablo) San Pablo, Laguna: Purple Panther Purple & White 1947: 1978 Bellarmine College: Baguio: Berchmans College: Cebu City: 1949: 1963 Immaculate Conception School [n 1] Ozamiz ...
Central Panay Mountain Range is the longest and largest mountain range in the island of Panay and Western Visayas in the Philippines.With a total length of 170 km (110 mi) long north–south and 34 km (21 mi) width east–west.
The main campus is located on a 760-metre (2,490 ft) plateau in Mt. Nebo, Valencia City, with an area of 10.24 km 2, which includes farmlands, forests, and ranch lands ideal for industry work. The land has an ample supply of water that allows MVC to have its own hydroelectric plants , providing the campus populace with enough electricity along ...
At 4,760 metres (15,617 ft), it is the highest point of the Jayawijaya (Orange) Range and is included in Seven Second Summits. Following Puncak Jaya /Mount Carstensz (4884 m) 350 km to the west, Mandala is the second-highest freestanding mountain in Oceania , Australasia , New Guinea , and Indonesia .
By 1923, the Governor General renamed the school to the Bukidnon Rural High School and allocated 724 hectares for the school's reservation by virtue of Proclamation No. 30. In 1928, the Philippine Legislature changed the named of the school to Bukidnon Agricultural High School, which was then a secondary agricultural school for male students.
The following is an incomplete list of mountains in the Philippines. Several of these are volcanoes , formed by subducting tectonic plates surrounding the archipelago . [ 1 ]
Managok is an urbanizing barangay in the Basakan District of Malaybalay, Bukidnon, Philippines.According to the 2015 census, it has a population of 7,200 people. [2]It is bounded to the north by Linabo and Maligaya, to the east by Miglamin, to the south by San Martin, to the southwest by Simaya, and to the west by Violeta. [3]