Citations:Wanjung

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English citations of Wanjung

  • 2016 July, “Explore Taiwan's Indigenous Tribes”, in Council of Indigenous Peoples[1], archived from the original on 14 November 2018:
    Truku — Distributed across Hualien’s Hsiulin, Wanjung and Ji'an Townships, as well as Nantou’s Jen-ai Township. There are about 24,000 people in total.
  • 2017 December 10, Yi-chia Chen, Wu Po-wei, Wang Chun-chi, Jake Chung, “Survey identifies hot spring resorts with no licenses”, in Taipei Times[2], archived from the original on 09 December 2017[3]:
    The resort is near the Ruisuei Hot Springs area, but administratively belongs to Wanjung Township (萬榮), which makes it difficult to obtain the necessary approvals and water rights, Lu said.
    The Hualien County Government said that the location on Aboriginal reserved land is the main obstacle to resolving the issue and it would ask the county’s Indigenous Peoples Department and the Wanjung Township Office to assist the resort in obtaining legal papers for its land and water rights.
  • 2019, Zhang Yiqiong et al., “The Yuli Belt in Taiwan: Part of the suture zone separating Eurasian and Philippine Sea plates”, in Terrestrial, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences[4], volume 31, number 4, published 2020, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 421, column 1:
    The Yuli Belt is dominantly composed of greenschist facies, often highly carbonaceous quartz-mica schists with blocks of metabasites up to blueschist facies (Fig. 2). Three larger exposures of these blocks are the Wanjung, Juisui, and Chinsui Hsi areas (Yen 1963; Liou et al. 1975; Liou and Ernst 1984; Yui and Lo 1989; Tsai et al. 2013; Table 2 and Fig. 2).