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  2. Phosphate mining in Banaba and Nauru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphate_mining_in_Banaba...

    Ellis' discovery of phosphate excited John T. Arundel of the Pacific Islands Company and the company decided to pursue rights and access to Nauru's lucrative resource. The negotiations to pursue rights to the phosphate involved four parties: the British and German governments, the newly reorganised Pacific Phosphate Company, and Jaluit-Gesellschaft (a German mining company that had been ...

  3. Effects of mining in Nauru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_mining_in_Nauru

    Roughly 80% of Nauru has been decimated by strip mining. The effects of phosphate mining in Nauru have had significant negative impacts on the island's environment and economy. [1] One of the most prominent effects of the phosphate mining in Nauru is the extensive environmental degradation that has occurred as a result of the extraction of ...

  4. Nauru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nauru

    Map of Nauru showing its districts. Nauru is divided into fourteen administrative districts, which are grouped into eight electoral constituencies and are further divided into villages. [5] [4] The most populous district is Denigomodu, with 1,804 residents, of which 1,497 reside in a Republic of Nauru Phosphate Corporation settlement called ...

  5. Geology of Nauru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_Nauru

    Water is brought to Nauru as ballast on ships returning for loads of phosphate. [6] Fresh water can be found in Buada Lagoon, and also in some brackish ponds at the escarpment base in Ijuw and Anabar in the northeast. [7] [8] There is an underground lake called Moqua Well in Moqua Caves in the southeast of the island. [9]

  6. Geography of Nauru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Nauru

    Enlargeable, detailed map of Nauru Nauru is a tiny phosphate rock island nation located in the South Pacific Ocean south of the Marshall Islands in Oceania . It is only 53 kilometres (33 mi) south of the Equator at coordinates 0°32′S 166°55′E  /  0.533°S 166.917°E  / -0.533; 16

  7. Topside (Nauru) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Topside_(Nauru)

    Typical Topside landscape as a result of phosphate mining Topside is the name given to the high plateau that comprises the inland portion of the Pacific island nation of Nauru . Its geography is characterized by calcium carbonate pinnacles that make the land unsuitable for agriculture or forestry .

  8. Buada Lagoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buada_Lagoon

    The lagoon is classified as an endorheic lake, meaning there is no outflow to other bodies of water such as oceans or rivers. The Buada Lagoon is the biggest and only true lake in Nauru, a small nation in Oceania consisting of a flat island of 21.3 km 2 (8.2 sq mi) in area. The lake lies in Nauru's Buada district, from which it gets its name.

  9. Economy of Nauru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Nauru

    Map of Nauru Tree map of Nauru. The economy of Nauru is tiny, based on a population in 2019 of only 11,550 people. [12] The economy has historically been based on phosphate mining. With primary phosphate reserves exhausted by the end of the 2010s, Nauru has sought to diversify its sources of income.