| Mine 美祢市 |
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| — City — | |
| Karst landscape of Akiyoshidai | |
| Location of Mine in Yamaguchi | |
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| Coordinates: 34°09′47″N 131°12′30″E / 34.16306°N 131.20833°ECoordinates: 34°09′47″N 131°12′30″E / 34.16306°N 131.20833°E | |
| Country | Japan |
| Region | Chūgoku |
| Prefecture | Yamaguchi |
| Government | |
| • Mayor | Hiroshi Murata (since April 2008) |
| Area | |
| • Total | 472.71 km2 (182.51 sq mi) |
| Population (May 1, 2011) | |
| • Total | 28,392 |
| • Density | 60.06/km2 (155.6/sq mi) |
| Time zone | Japan Standard Time (UTC+9) |
| City symbols | |
| - Tree | Live oak |
| - Flower | Cherry blossom |
| Phone number | 81-(0)837-52-1111 |
| Address | Omine Higashiwake 326-1, Mine City, Yamaguchi Prefecture (山口県美祢市大嶺東分326番1号) 759-2292 |
| Website | City of Mine |
Mine (美祢市 Mine-shi) is a city located in Yamaguchi, Japan.
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The city was founded on March 31, 1954 by a merger of municipalities that departed from Mine District (Mine-gun).
On March 21, 2008, the city merged with the rest of Mine District, which consisted of towns Mitō and Shūhō, while the newly merged city retained the name, Mine.
Yamaguchi Prefecture consisted of seven counties which were integrated into the two provinces of Suō and Nagato in the 7th century. During the rise of the samurai class in the Heian and Kamakura Periods (794–1333), the Ouchi family of Suō Province and the Koto family of Nagato Province gained influence as powerful warrior clans. In the Muromachi Period (1336—1573), Ouchi Hiroyo, the 24th ruler of the Ouchi family conquered both areas of Yamaguchi Prefecture. The Ouchi clan imitated the city planning of Kyoto. They gained great wealth through cultural imports from the continent and trade with Korea and Ming Dynasty China. As a result, Yamaguchi came to be known as the "Kyoto of the West," and Ouchi culture flourished. Sue Harutaka defeated the 31st ruler of the Ouchi clan. The Sue clan was then defeated by Mōri Motonari, and the Mōri family gained control of the Chugoku region. Yamaguchi was ruled as part of the Mōri clan domain during the Sengoku period. Mōri Terumoto was then defeated by Tokugawa Ieyasu in the battle of Sekigahara in 1600. He was forced to give up all his land except for the Suō and Nagato areas (current-day Yamaguchi Prefecture), where he built his castle in Hagi. Mōri sought to strengthen the economic base of the region and increase local production with his Three Whites campaign (salt, rice, and paper).
After Commodore Matthew Perry's opening of Japan, clans from Nagato (also called Chōshū) played a key role in the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate and the establishment of the new imperial government. Four years after the Edo Shogunate was overthrown and the Meiji government formed in 1868, the present Yamaguchi Prefecture was established. The Meiji government brought in many new systems and modern policies, and promoted the introduction of modern industry, though the prefecture was still centered around agriculture during this period. In the Taisho period, from 1912 to 1926, shipbuilding, chemical, machinery, and metal working plants were built in Yamaguchi's harbors in the Seto Inland Sea area. During the post-World War II Shōwa Period, Yamaguchi developed into one of the most industrialized prefectures in the country due to the establishment of petrochemical complexes.[1][2]
The plateau consists of uplifted reef limestones of Paleozoic age, which were thickened by overfolding during the Akiyoshidai orogenic movement. Subsequent erosion has created an undulating karst landscape dimpled with many dolines and countless limestone pinnacles up to two meters in height. Beneath the surface lie hundreds of caves, a few of them quite significant geologically.
Numerous fossils of Pleistocene age have been found in these caves, including those of the Japanese rhinoceros, Stegodont elephant, Naumann elephant, Young tiger, and numerous other animals from the last interglacial period.
The area around Akiyoshidai was once heavily forested about 500,000 years ago. In the Jōmon period, the area served as a hunting ground and the bottoms of sinkholes as vegetable fields. Numerous Paleolithic artifacts have been recovered. As farming began in Japan, the local people eventually replaced the forested landscape with Japanese pampas grass for feeding their animals and thatching houses. Repeated cycles of burning the grass have kept trees from growing back since.
Media related to Mine, Yamaguchi at Wikimedia Commons
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