HOKKAIDO

hōkīˈdō, island (1990 pop. 5,643,515), c.30,130 sq mi (78,040 sq km), N Japan, separated from Honshu island by the Tsugaru Strait and from Sakhalin, Russia, by the Soya Strait. It is the second largest, northernmost, and most sparsely populated of the major islands of Japan. Once called Yezo, it received the name Hokkaido [region of the northern sea] in 1869. Its rugged interior with many volcanic peaks rises to 7,511 ft (2,289 m) in Asahi-dake and, like all of Japan, the island is subject to earthquakes. The Ishikari, second longest river of Japan, traverses W Hokkaido; its valley is an important urban and industrial region. Hokkaido has a humid continental climate and receives much snow. Forests, covering most of the island, are a source of lumber, pulp, and paper (milled in Hokkaido). Coal, iron, and manganese are mined; the Ishikari coal field produces a major part of Japan's supply. Although large areas of the island are unsuited to farming, agriculture is an important occupation. Hokkaido is one of the major fishing centers of the world. The island is the chief winter resort and sports area in Japan; the 1972 Winter Olympics were held there, at Sapporo. Hokkaido's scenic beauty is preserved in several national parks. The population is concentrated largely in the west and southwest. Sapporo, Hakodate, and Otaru are the chief cities. Kushiro is the main port for E Hokkaido.

The island was originally inhabited by Ainu, aborigines of uncertain ancestry. Until 1800 the Ainu outnumbered the Japanese, who had begun (16th cent.) to settle the southwest peninsula; there are now c.16,000 Ainu in Hokkaido. With the Meiji restoration (1868) Japan began the first serious effort to people the island as a means of strengthening the northern frontier. Under a government-sponsored plan to develop the island, Horace Capron, an American agriculturalist, introduced (1872–76) scientific methods of farming. In 1885, Hokkaido was made an administrative unit and was granted a central government. The growth of the railroads helped speed settlement, but despite subsidies, the severe winters discouraged emigration from S Japan. Parts of the island, particularly in the north, are still relatively underpopulated. The completion of the Seikan Tunnel (1988), which carries a rail line connecting Hokkaido and Honshu, has further decreased the isolation of Japan's northernmost island.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Hokkaido
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books on: Hokkaido  - 1365 results

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...520-22736-0(cloth : alk paper) 1. Ainu History. 2. Hokkaido (Japan) History. 3. Human ecology Japan Hokkaido. 4. Japan History Tokugawa period, 1600...embracing an Ainu elder 222 MAPS 1 Hokkaido during the Edo period (1600 1868) 18...
...Pioneers and the Japanese Frontier The Hokkaido region of Japan. AMERICAN PIONEERS and...transfer--Japan--History--19th century. 4. Hokkaido Japan --Industries--History--19th...ix 1. Hokkaido and the United States 1...
...remote border regions of Asia. They are Hokkaido, Japans northernmost island; the Sulu...them as he moves from the forests of Hokkaido westward around the are of Asia. We...anticipated a Point Four program for Hokkaido by almost a hundred years. Of these half-forgotten...
...The Hokkaido Former Natives Protection Act of 1899...Appendix 1 The Hokkaido Former Natives Protection Act of 1899...research for this book was undertaken at the Hokkaido University of Education in Iwamizawa...
...92.1 0.9 216 4.3 Hokkaido, Kanto-Tosan, Kyushu 149 d 1...soybeans 148 82 1.6 Hokkaido, Iwate 67 d of which peanuts...243.7 2.4 151 3.0 Hokkaido potatoes ; 107 d 1.7 n/a...
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journal articles on: Hokkaido  - 176 results

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...Variability in Microblade Assemblages in Hokkaido, Japan. by Yuichi Nakazawa...history on the late Upper Paleolithic in Hokkaido (northern Japan) shows that microblade...geoarchaeological characteristics in Hokkaido, created remarkable variability in reduction...
...the Aonae Dune Site, Okushiri Island, Hokkaido. by Hirofumi Matsumura , Mark...the Aonae Dune site, Okushiri Island, Hokkaido, Japan. Skeletal remains of an adult...different from other Okhotsk samples in Hokkaido. It is argued that these three skeletons...
...Redbeck, 2001) ISBN 0946980802 3.95 pounds sterling Sailing to Hokkaido by Joseph Woods (Tonbridge: Worple, 2001) ISBN 0953094766 6...Cuthbert could perhaps have been provided. In Sailing to Hokkaido Joseph Woods--a Patrick Kavanagh Award winner--also travels...
...nature of Japanese government has left the Hokkaido prefectural government responsible for...assimilation. The Ainu people inhabited Hokkaido (Ezo), Sakhalin, northern Honshu, and...colonial settlement policy, Japan annexed Hokkaido in 1872 and claimed it as terra nullius...
...banks--the Hyogo Bank on August 30, 1995, Hokkaido Takushoku Bank on November 17, 1997...shareholders and some of its large creditors. Hokkaido was the first large bank so resolved...available had lower returns on equity than Hokkaido Takushoku Bank did in the three years...
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magazine articles on: Hokkaido  - 56 results

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...rangers on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido were feeding a flock of red-crowned cranes...Kunashir, one of the Kuril Islands north of Hokkaido. That was an ornithological first and...sedentary group now squeezed into a corner of Hokkaido. The migratory flock breeds around the...
...being heavily promoted by activists in Hokkaido, Japan in advance of this summers G8...The Esperanto League for Freedom in Hokkaido (Libera Esperanto-Asocio en Hokkajdo...translations in English and Esperanto, and the Hokkaido-based Esperantists have put out international...
...from Russia. For years bird-watchers in Hokkaido, Japans northernmost island, had witnessed...the nearly 2,000 wintering eagles in Hokkaido hailed from the Amur River area, with...southern Kuril Islands off the coast of Hokkaido. But as snow and ice put the Kuril fish...
...Japan by Kenneth R. OConnell While traveling to Hokkaido, the northernmost island of Japan, I met Hiroshi Mizukoshi...Gallery" button and was transported to the "Virtual Gallery of Hokkaido." Next, I selected the "Virtual Gallery for Students." Here...
...particular comparison: "Which is more crowded, Hokkaido or Okinawa?" She reminds the class...rooms are the same size: "But in our case Hokkaido and Okinawa have different areas." She...suggests figuring out how many times bigger Hokkaido is than Okinawa. The teacher explains...
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newspaper articles on: Hokkaido  - 121 results

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...Powder High and Dry; VOLCANIC PEAKS: Hokkaido, with the Towering Mount Yotei in the...stuff is dumped onthe north island of Hokkaido every winter, which dwarfs the amounts...of the worst in the past 20 years for Hokkaido butwe still skied on fresh powder snow...
...small, cold, windy specks of land off Hokkaido, northernmost of Japans four main islands...Japan - the Habomai islets just east of Hokkaido, and the larger islands of Shikotan...Etorofu, a farthest of the four from Hokkaido, which has relatively successful canning...
Hokkaidos Ethnic Tribe Gets Recognition; Indigenous Ainu Mark Turning...Urakawa, a serene outpost on Japans northernmost island of Hokkaido that the ethnic group had dominated for centuries. But...meeting of the Group of Eight industrialized nations in Hokkaido. The Ainu call the island Ainu Mosir, which means Land...
...connecting the islands of Honshu and Hokkaido, is the longest in the world at 33.5...which separates the southern edge of Hokkaido from Aomori Prefecture on the northern...laid through the twin tunnels, but the Hokkaido Shinkansen (bullet train) project will...
...For Japanese on the northern island of Hokkaido, the five-day visit that began today...active warship, have inundated the local Hokkaido Shimbun newspaper since the visit was...of nearly 4,000 faces a tough sell. Hokkaido Gov. Tatsuya Hori plans to boycott todays...
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encyclopedia articles on: Hokkaido  - 28 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-28 >>  
 
HOKKAIDO hoki do, island (1990 pop. 5,643,515), c.30,130 sq...islands of Japan. Once called Yezo, it received the name Hokkaido region of the northern sea in 1869. Its rugged interior...The Ishikari, second longest river of Japan, traverses W Hokkaido; its valley is an important urban and industrial region...
...po ro, city (1990 pop. 1,671,742), capital of Hokkaido prefecture, SW Hokkaido, Japan. It is one of Japans most rapidly growing...Festival and played host to the 1972 winter Olympics. Hokkaido Univ. and Sapporo Agricultural School are in the...
KUSHIRO kooshe ro, city (1990 pop. 205,640), SE Hokkaido, Japan, on the Pacific Ocean. The main port of E Hokkaido and the islands only ice-free trading port, it exports timber, fish, and coal. Kushiro is also a major base for fishermen. The...
EBETSU aba tsoo, city (1990 pop. 97,201), Hokkaido prefecture, central Hokkaido, Japan. It is an industrial suburb of Sapporo and the site of a huge electric power company. Its industries include food processing and paper manufacturing...
BIBAI bi bi, city (1990 pop. 35,176), Hokkaido prefecture, central Hokkaido, Japan. Due to the decline of the Ishikari coal field, the population of Bibai has decreased steadily since the 1960s. The citys main products are electrical appliances...
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