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Altai

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Altai

Republic of the Russian Federation, within the Altai krai (territory) of southern Siberia; area 92,600 sq km/35,752 sq mi; population (1996) 202,000 (24% urban). The oblast was formed in 1922, and Altai was formed after the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1992. Its capital is Gorno-Altaisk.

Physical

Dominated by the Altai Mountains, the republic borders on Mongolia and China to the south. It contains forested mountains and high plateaux, as well as mercury and gold deposits.

Industries

The main industries include lumbering and mining (mercury and coal); livestock breeding (sheep, cattle, goats), fishing, hunting, beekeeping, and dairy farming.

Altai

Krai (territory) in southwest Siberia, Russian Federation; area 261,700 sq km/101,042 sq mi; population (1996) 2,690,000 (52.5% urban). The main cities are Barnaul (capital), Biysk, and Rubtsovsk. The area is situated on lowlands, with the Altai Mountains in the southeast and the Kulunda Steppe (one of the main agricultural areas in western Siberia) in the northwest. The principal river is the Ob. Mineral deposits include gold, non-ferrous metals, and salt. The chief industries are food processing, textiles, engineering, and chemicals; agricultural production includes wheat, sunflowers, flax, and sugar beet, and the farming of dairy cattle.

Part of the Mongol empire from the 13th century onwards, Altai was annexed by Russia in the 18th century. Its first smelting plant was built in 1726, but its agricultural colonization dates from the 19th century. World War II, when a number of Volga Germans were deported here, and the ‘Virgin Land’ campaign of the 1950s – a huge programme to irrigate the steppe region – gave new impetus to its economic development. The USSR exploded its first atomic bomb in 1949 at a test site in Siberia 170 km/106 mi from the region. The 2.3 million inhabitants were unaware of the test and within two hours were engulfed by the radiation cloud. Research in 1995 (no longer restricted by official secrecy) estimated that 27 of the 58 districts were extensively contaminated with fallout, and approximately 11,000 extra cancers resulted.

Children in the Altai are often born with jaundice; according to aid workers, the incidence in 1997 was over 50% in some villages. This may be due to toxins in rocket fuel, as, according to estimates by space scientists, approximately 1,400 t of rocket fuel had fallen over the Altai region.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
After an initial confirmed occurrence in Novosibirsk region, cases of avian flu were recorded this summer in the Tyumen and Altai regions.
Between 1994 and 1996, Duraid Altai stole 200 machines worth $1 million, then sold many through newspaper ads.
processing, according to Altai Efendiev, economic counsellor at the
 
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