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On October 17, 1961, the city of Darkhan was built with extensive economic assistance from the Comecon. [1] As its name implies, the city was originally conceived to be a manufacturing site for Mongolia's northern territory. Polish specialists built a woodworking plant, brickworks and a lime factory in Darkhan. [1]
Snow in Darkhan City, Darkhan-Uul, Mongolia. In November 2015, snow covered up to 90% of the territory area of Mongolia. [1] History. On 26 December 1966, ...
Sharyngol is largely a cold city, with hot summers and very cold winters. [6] situated in the north of Mongolia, the terrain in Sharyngol is largely surrounded by mountains; in the south of the Darkhan-Uul Province, it is located 218 km (135 miles) from the capital Ulaanbaatar.
Ulaanbaatar and chiefly Sükhbaatar Square was a major site of demonstrations that led to Mongolia's transition to democracy and market economy in 1990. Starting on 10 December 1989, protesters outside the Youth Culture Center called for Mongolia to implement perestroika and glasnost in their full sense.
The Zeitz weather station has recorded the following extreme values: [8] ... Darkhan, Mongolia (1989) Detmold, Germany (1990) Kaliningrad, Russia (1995) Tosu, Japan ...
Mongolia has very sunny weather with average insolation above 1,500 W/m2 in most of the country, making solar power highly available. In 2017, Mongolia commissioned the 10 MW Darkhan Solar Power Plant in Darkhan-Uul Province, the first photovoltaic power station in the country. [7] 247 MW of solar power plants have been approved for construction.
The city Darkhan was founded on 17 October 1961 within Selenge Province, as a second industrial center to reduce migration pressure on the capital, Ulaanbaatar. [2]The Darkhan City was carved out of the Selenge Province in 1994 and was upgraded to Darkhan-Uul Province according to the Law on the Administrative Units of Mongolia and their Governance, which was passed through Parliament ...
Darkhan (Mongolian: Дархан) is a sum (district) of Khentii Province in eastern Mongolia. Bor-Öndör city is 43 km S from the sum center. In 2010, its population was 1,549.