Citations:Dushanzi

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English citations of Dushanzi

City[edit]

  • [1962, W. A. Douglas Jackson, “Sino-Soviet Relations and the Communist Revolution”, in The Russo-Chinese Borderlands: Zone of Peaceful Contact or Potential Conflict?[1], 2nd edition, D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc., published 1968, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 91:
    By mid-1960 track had been laid to within 200 miles of Urumchi; but by mid-1961 it remained uncompleted, possibly because of a lack of steel for rails. From Urumchi, it was planned to extend the line westward past the oilfields at Tushantzu, into the Dzhungarian Gate.]
  • 2008 January 3, Aizhu Chen, “RPT-UPDATE 2-PetroChina delays refinery, petchem unit to end '08”, in Ramthan Hussain, editor, Reuters[2], archived from the original on 21 March 2023, Oil and Gas‎[3]:
    “It is hugely difficult to build a new refinery out of the Gobi Desert. We have pushed it back by about a year,” a company source told Reuters by telephone from Dushanzi city in Xinjiang region, near the Kazakhstan border.

Oil Fields[edit]

  • 1979, Donald H. McMillen, Chinese Communist Power and Policy in Xinjiang, 1949-1977[4], Westview Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 7:
    Petroleum is by far the most important fuel resource in Xinjiang. Initial commercial petroleum production dates from about 1940, when the relatively small Dushanzi field was developed, largely by the Soviets, some fifteen miles southeast of Wusu, a highway junction west of Urumqi.
  • [1987, Arthur C. Hasiotis, Jr., Soviet Political, Economic, and Military Involvement in Sinkiang from 1928 to 1949[5], Garland Publishing, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 127:
    On February 16, 1944, China and Russia signed the Resource Sale Agreement, by which the USSR sold all its buildings and facilities at the Tu-shan-tzu oil fields to China for $1.7 million (U.S. dollars).]
  • 2014, 李欣凭 [Li Xinping], “Industry and Prosperity”, in 活力新疆 [Modern Xinjiang]‎[6], Beijing: China Intercontinental Press (五洲传播出版社), →ISBN, →OCLC, page 101:
    There is an “asphalt mound” at about 130 kilometers north of Dushanzi oil field.