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Citations:Chinshan

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English citations of Chinshan

In Taiwan

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  • 1982 February 21, “Wulai: Hot springs resort with treasury of culture”, in Free China Weekly[1], volume XXII, number 7, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 2, column 2:
    Another type, also common in the Taipei area has more chlorides than sulfates, and while it is also hot, its flavor is more salty than sour. The springs at Chinshan on the north coast are typical of this type.
  • 2003, “The North Coast”, in Vivien Kim, editor, Taiwan (Insight Guides)‎[2], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 165:
    The next point of interest is Chinshan ⑥, which is worth pausing at for several reasons. For one. Chinpaoli Street, in the old town of Chinshan, is one of the few places in all of Taiwan where it is still possible to see some lingering Qing-era architecture, and is noted as one of the best-preserved old shopping streets on the island.
  • (Can we date this quote?), “Center information”, in China Youth Corps[3], archived from the original on 11 September 2022[4]:
    Chinshan Youth Activity Center is situated in Huanggang village of Chinshan District. []
    Chinshan Youth Activity Center is located in Henggang village, Chinshan Distrcit[sic – meaning District]; it is 25km south of Keelung, 38km north of Tamsui and 25km west of Yangming Mountain.

Altai

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  • [1912, H. S. Brunnert, V. V. Hagelstrom, N. Th. Kolessoff, “Metropolitan Prefecture and Manchuria, Provincial Administration and Dependencies of China”, in A. Beltchenko, E. E. Moran, transl., Present Day Political Organization of China[5], translation of original in Russian, →OCLC, page 450:
    The district of Altai (in Chinese 阿爾泰 A⁴ Êrh³ Tʻai⁴, or 金山 Chin¹ Shan¹; see NO. 869A) was made distinct from that of Kʻobdo (see NO. 876) in 1907 (see an Imperial Decree of the 20th January, 1907, issued in consequence of representations by []]