Citations:Hopi

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English citations of Hopi

In China

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  • 1960 September, “1957 April-December”, in E. Stuart Kirby, editor, Contemporary China[1], volume III, →OCLC, page 278:
    A Coal Mine capable of producing 450,000 tons of coal annually started operation in Hopi, Honan.
  • 1972, Theodore Shabad, “The North China Plain”, in China's Changing Map[2], New York: Frederick A. Praeger, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 119:
    Two other major coal-mining centers, each producing coking-grade bituminous coal, have been developed in Honan since the late 1950's. Hopi, in northernmost Honan, arose in 1957 on the site of a small, primitive operation in a deposit of lean coal, low in volatile content. A city was established in that year, and the mining complex was linked by a 12-mile rail spur with Tangyin, on the main Peking-Hankow line.
  • 1975 June 17, Walter Sullivan, “CHINA STUDY LINKS CANCER TO REGION”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 05 October 2023, page 66[4]:
    Death certificates were tabulated to map morality from esophageal cancer in the 181 counties and cities of the survey. The counties with the highest incidences were Yangcheng and Hopi with rates, respectively, of 135 and 140 per 100,000. By contrast, in Hunyuan County the rate was under 2 per 100,000.

Native Americans

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  • 1997, Thomas E. Mails, The Hopi Survival Kit, London: Peguin Books, published 1997, →ISBN, page 12:
    If there were serious problems, I hadn’t learned anything about them during the time when, ten years earlier, I had visited the Reservation on numerous occasions while I was researching what became my two-volume series on the Pueblo Indians. The dangers of being only an outside observer can be seen here! The festering problems and searing divisions at Hopi escaped me entirely.
  • 2023 April 2, Arlyssa Becenti, “It's in the water: Hopi Marine veteran takes a chance and opens his dream coffee shop”, in The Arizona Republic[5], →ISSN:
    Underneath Second Mesa is the N-aquifer, the most pristine and crucial water source for Hopi, which Peabody Coal pumped millions of gallons of to use for its coal slurry.

French citations of Hopi