Monday, March 26, 2007
Japan's Resources
Japan has very few natural resources, their minerals are iron ore, copper, zinc, lead and, silver. Important energy resources such as oil and coal have to be imported from elsewhere. Their tea crops are very important and the main tea they grow are green tea.
First Picture: Iron Ore
Second Picture: Copper
Third Picture: Zinc
Fourth Picture: Lead
Fifth Picture: Silver
Sixth Picture: Oil
Seventh Picture: Coal
Eight Picture: Green Tea
Farming
Rice
Despite the very difficult conditions for farming rice is very important to the Japanese economy. Rice needs particular conditions to grow, the seeds are cultivated under plastic greenhouses until they are seedlings. They are then planted with roots covered by 10cm of water, then substantial engineering woks required to provide the irrigation and drainage systems needed for the paddy fields. The rice matures in autmn and is golden-brown before harvested. It is grown throughout Japan but mostly in the south.
Pictures: Rice fields in Japan
Other crops
Timber
Japan is very rich in woodland but not timber. Much of the woodland lies in remote mountanious areas, expensive to exploit.
Land Resources
Some of Japan's land resources are fish, potatoes, tea fruit, sugar beet, sugar cane, charcoal, timber, silk, hops
Friday, March 23, 2007
Fishing
For many years Japan has caught more fish than any other country. Just like other great fishing nations they have suffered depletion of coastel and deep-sea fisheries these recent years. From that they have depleted fishing stocks and there is coastel water and international restrictions on deep-sea fishing. Today they are ranked third in the world for fishing. The decline in the fishing fleet has had drastic impact on many fishing communties. Many fishing communties have hit a number of problems. enviromental protesters. They have had enviromental protesters, pollution in inland waters, but the main problem was overfishing. They are being caught to early and they had no time to breed successfully and that declined great numbers of unemployment To make up for their loss they increased aquaculture or fish farming. Fish is a very important part of the Japanese diet, they use 40% of population intake of animal protein far higher than most western countries.
In 1985 they caught 12 million tonnes worth of fish. In 1995 they caught 7.5 million tonnes worth of fish.
Right: Fish market
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