- Ararat, Armenia
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Ararat
ԱրարատCoordinates: 39°48′34″N 44°42′52″E / 39.80944°N 44.71444°E Country Armenia Marz (Province) Ararat Established 1939 Government – Mayor Abraham Babayan Area – Total 11 km2 (4.2 sq mi) Elevation 825 m (2,707 ft) Population (2009) – Total 20,700 – Density 245.5/km2 (635.8/sq mi) Time zone (UTC+4) – Summer (DST) (UTC+5) Sources: Population [1] Coordinates: 39°48′34″N 44°42′52″E / 39.80944°N 44.71444°E Ararat (Armenian: Արարատ; formerly, Davalu) is a city in Armenia in the province of Ararat, about 42 km northwest of Yerevan.
The Ararat Cement Factory has been opened in 1927 along with small apartments to accommodate the workers. In 1935, it was incorporated with the village of Davalu. In 1939 the town of Ararat was officially established. In 1957.
Today in the city of has two major factories: the cement factory and the Ararat Gold Recovery Company. The ecology of the city is in danger due to emissions of cement dust and cyanide from the gold manufacturing plants. In the summer of 2005, the impurity of the atmosphere was recorded to be 9.6 times the acceptable norm.
Contents
Controversy over the Ararat Gold Recovery Company
Besides the various enterprises based on the manufacturing of building materials, the city is also home to the Ararat Gold Recovery Company (AGRC) which extracts gold from the raw ore sent from the gold mine in Sotk which is 20 kilometers east of Lake Sevan.[2] About 0.46 grams of gold is extracted from each ton of sand unearthed at the mines. The extraction process involves first pulverizing the raw material, and then filtering out the gold using a cyanide nitrate chemical process.[2]
The soupy byproduct of the cyanide nitrate chemical process is both toxic and radioactive and collects in a tailings dam. There have been numerous incidents of animals dying near and around the plant's area.[2] Also, within the years 2003 and 2008, there have been at least 10 accidents at the plant, some of which have resulted in the discharge of the cyanide soup into neighboring agricultural lands and fisheries, killing off cows and fish stock.[2]
Sister cities
- Bussy-Saint-Georges, since 7 August 2009[3]
Sport
- FC Araks Ararat (football club)
References
- Ararat, Armenia at GEOnet Names Server
- World Gazeteer: Armenia – World-Gazetteer.com
- Report of the results of the 2001 Armenian Census
Footnotes
- ^ Armstats:Population
- ^ a b c d Behind Gold’s Luster Lie Lands Torn Asunder and Urgent Questions, Hetq Online, May 19, 2008.
- ^ "Armtown.com". http://www.armtown.com/news/am/prm/20090807/69510/.
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Categories:- Populated places established in 1929
- Ararat (province)
- Populated places in Ararat
- Ararat (province) geography stubs
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