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Jharia

Jharia is a neighbourhood in Dhanbad city in Dhanbad Sadar subdivision of Dhanbad district in Jharkhand state, India. Jharia's economy is heavily dependent on the local coal fields, used to make coke. However, fires in the coal fields have made the city heavily polluted, with several government studies recommending relocation of much of the population to nearby Belgaria.[2][3]

Jharia
Neighbourhood in Dhanbad
Jharia coalfield
Jharia
Location in Jharkhand, India
Jharia
Jharia (India)
Coordinates: 23°45′06″N 86°25′13″E / 23.751568°N 86.420345°E / 23.751568; 86.420345Coordinates: 23°45′06″N 86°25′13″E / 23.751568°N 86.420345°E / 23.751568; 86.420345
CountryIndia
StateJharkhand
DistrictDhanbad
Elevation
77 m (253 ft)
Population
 (2001)
 • Total81,979
Languages
 • OfficialHindi, Urdu
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
828111
Vehicle registrationJH
Websitedhanbad.nic.in
[1]

As of 2011, Jharia was the fifteenth-largest town in the state of Jharkhand.[4] Subsequently, Jharia plays a very important role in the economy and development of the metropolitan area around Dhanbad City.

Governance

Current Member of Parliament for Jharia is from is Pashupati Nath Singh from BJP who represents Dhanbad district in 2019 Lok Sabha. Current Member of Legislative Assembly is Purnima Niraj Singh from congress

Geography

Cities, towns and locations in the central portion of Dhanbad Sadar subdivision in Dhanbad district
MC: Municipal Corporation, CT: Census Town, N: Neighbourhood, R: Rural/ Urban centre
Owing to space constraints in the small map, the actual locations in a larger map may vary slightly

Location

Jharia is located at 23°45′06″N 86°25′13″E / 23.751568°N 86.420345°E / 23.751568; 86.420345.

Note: The map alongside presents some of the notable locations in the area. All places marked in the map are linked in the larger full screen map.

Jharia, earlier a census town, was combined with other urban units to form Dhanbad Municipal Corporation in 2006.[5][6]

Jharia is spread over parts of Ward Nos. 36,37 and 38 of Dhanbad Municipal Corporation.[7]

Overview

The region shown in the map is a part of the undulating uplands bustling with coalmines in the lowest rung of the Chota Nagpur Plateau. The entire area shown in the map is under Dhanbad Municipal Corporation, except Belgaria which is under Baliapur (community development block). The places in the DMC area are marked as neighbourhoods. The DMC area shown in the map is around the core area of Dhanbad city. Another major area of DMC is shown in the map of the southern portion of the district. A small stretch of DMC, extending up to Katras is shown in the map of the western portion. The region is fully urbanised. Jharia (community development block) has been merged into DMC. Three operational areas of BCCL operate fully within the region – Sijua Area, Kusunda Area and Bastacola Area.[8][9][10][11][12][13]

Police station

There is a police station at Jharia.[14][15]

Demographics

As of 2001 India census,[16] Jharia had a population of 81,979. Males constitute 54% of the population and females 46%. Jharia has an average literacy rate of 68%, lower than the national average of 74.5%: male literacy is 74%, and female literacy is 60%. In Jharia, 14% of the population is under 6 years of age.

Relocation

According to the state government this is the worst site of India, the town of Jharia is to be shifted due to the uncontrollable coal mine fires (see below), which have found to be undousable, leading to loss of property and lives. Coal worth Rs. 60,000 crore (US$12 billion) is lying unmined, and the state government feels the shifting will help in exploiting this resource.[17] The Jharia Rehabilitation and Development Authority is supposed to relocate much of the population to Belgaria and other towns nearby.[2] However, as of 2017, the organization was facing considerable challenges in acquiring land and doing construction,[2] and a 2016 book reporting on the relocation effort, found that the relocation was not accounting for Just Transition of jobs, or adequate high quality housing.[3]

Coal field

 
Jharia Coal mine

The coal field lies in the Damodar River Valley, and covers about 110 square miles (280 square km), and produces bituminous coal suitable for coke. Most of India's coal comes from Jharia. Jharia coal mines are India's most important storehouse[18] of prime coke coal used in blast furnaces, it consists of 23 large underground and nine large open cast mines.[17]

The mining activities in these coalfields started in 1894 and had really intensified in 1925. The first Indians to arrive and break monopoly of British in Coal mining were Gujarati.

After the mines were nationalized in 1971, due to easy availability of coal, many steel plants were set up in close proximity to Jharia.

Coal field fire

Jharia is famous for a coal field fire that has burned underground for a century. The first fire was detected in 1916.[17] According to records, it was the Khas Jharia mines of Seth Khora Ramji, who was a pioneer of Indian coalmines, whose mines were one of the firsts to collapse in underground fire in 1930. Two of his collieries, Khas Jharia and Golden Jharia, which worked on maximum 260-foot-deep shafts,[19] collapsed due to now infamous underground fires, in which their house and bungalow also collapsed on 8 November 1930, causing a six meter subsidence and widespread destruction.[20][21][19][22][23][24] The fire never stopped despite sincere efforts by mines department and railway authorities and in 1933 flaming crevasses lead to exodus of many residents.[19] The 1934 Nepal–Bihar earthquake led to further spread of fire and by 1938 the authorities had declared that there is raging fire beneath the town with 42 collieries out of 133 on fire.[25]

In 1972, more than 70 mine fires were reported in this region. As of 2007, more than 400,000 people who reside in Jharia are living on land in danger of subsidence due to the fires, and according to Satya Pratap Singh, "Jharia township is on the brink of an ecological and human disaster".[26] The government has been criticized for a perceived lackadaisical attitude[27] towards the safety of the people of Jharia.[28] Heavy fumes emitted by the fires[29] lead to severe health problems such as breathing disorders and skin diseases among the local population.[30]

Education

Ammonia pollution

In 2018, researchers at Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) in Belgium revealed a created map of global atmospheric ammonia, by combining nine years of satellite data, that show Jharia and surroundings are heavily ammonia polluted from burning coal mines.[34] The emitted ammonia reacts rapidly with other air pollutants, and thereby helps to form fine particulate matter that shortens the human lifespan through respiratory and coronary diseases. Moreover, the gaseous ammonia and ammonium compounds formed from it in the atmosphere, are deposited into ecosystems, throughout the Himalayas, damaging sensitive habitats — especially those naturally adapted to need clean air.[35]

Transport

See also

References

  1. ^ "Maps, Weather, and Airports for Jharia, India".
  2. ^ a b c "Living above a century-old coal fire, Jharia residents pay the price for India's mining ambitions". Mongabay Environmental News. 9 March 2017. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  3. ^ a b Pai, Sandeep; Carr-Wilson, Savannah (2018). Total Transition: The Human Side of the Renewable Energy Revolution. Rocky Mountain Books. ISBN 978-1-77160-248-8.
  4. ^ "Jharkhand cities and town, world-gazetteer.com".[dead link]
  5. ^ . DMC. Archived from the original on 15 October 2017. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  6. ^ "Dhanbad Dsitrict Map". Physical Map of Dhanbad. Jharkhand Government. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  7. ^ "Dhanbad Municipal Corporation". प्रादेशिक निर्वाचन क्षेत्रों की सूची (in Hindi). Jharkhand Government. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  8. ^ "District Census Handbook Dhanbad" (PDF). Series 21, Part XIIA, pages 4-5, 5-6, 8. Directorate of Census Operations, Jharkhand. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  9. ^ "2011 Census C.D. Block Wise Primary Census Abstract Data(PCA)". Jharkhand – District-wise CD Blocks. Registrar General and Census Commissioner, India. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  10. ^ "Area". Bharat Coking Coal Limited. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  11. ^ . DMC. Archived from the original on 15 October 2017. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  12. ^ . Physical Map of Dhanbad. Jharkhand Government. Archived from the original on 5 October 2017. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  13. ^ . प्रादेशिक निर्वाचन क्षेत्रों की सूची (in Hindi). Jharkhand Government. Archived from the original on 28 October 2017. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  14. ^ "Jharkhand Police". Contact Numbers. JP. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  15. ^ . Administrative Structure of Dhanbad District – List of Thana and Outpost of Dhanbad Outpost. Jharkhand Government. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  16. ^ . Census Commission of India. Archived from the original on 16 June 2004. Retrieved 1 November 2008.
  17. ^ a b c Mishra, Law Kumar (31 August 2006). "Jharia to be shifted". The Times of India. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 July 2007. Retrieved 17 January 2008.
  19. ^ a b c Amin, Samir; Amin, Shahid; Linden, Marcel van der (1997). Peripheral Labour: Studies in the History of Partial Proletarianization edited by Shahid Amin, Marcel van der Linden. p. 83. ISBN 9780521589000.
  20. ^ Gazetteers of Bengal, Assam, Bihar & Orissa 1917 Khora Ramji Colliries
  21. ^ Khora Ramji Mines capsized in 1938
  22. ^ Diary of Golden Days at Jharia – A Memoir & History of Gurjar Kashtriya Samaj of Kutch in Coalfields of Jharia – written by Natwarlal Devram Jethwa:1998 Page:12
  23. ^ Nanji Bapa ni Nondh-pothi published in Gujarati in year 1999 from Vadodara. It is a diary of Railway Contracts done by KGK community noted by Nanji Govindji Tank of Jamshedpur, compiled by Dharsibhai Jethalal Tank, Tatanagar. (Aank Sidhhi awarded to book by Kutch Shakti at Mumbai in 2000): Life Sketch of Seth Khora Ramji Chawra Page :76
  24. ^ [1] The Jharia underground fire still raging first came to notice in November, 1930 with subsidance at Seth Khora Ramji's Khas Jharia Colliery(Page 159). He was told that Seth Khora Ramji, whose mines lay underneath Jharia, had chosen to live in his house, which also collapsed in subsidance(Page 160). "The politics of labour under late colonialism: workers, unions, and the state in Chota Nagpur, 1928–1939 by Dilip Simeon."
  25. ^ Searchlight, 24 January 1936.
  26. ^ Hindustan Times, 15 December 2007[dead link]
  27. ^ The Jharia mine fire control technical assistance project: an analysis, April 2004
  28. ^
  29. ^ ESTIMATION OF GAS EMISSIONS FROM SHALLOW SUBSURFACE COAL FIRES IN JHARIA COALFIELD
  30. ^ In the line of fire, indiatogether.org
  31. ^ "RSP College". Jharia.in. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  32. ^ "New site for oldest school". The Telegraph, 8 October 201. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  33. ^ "Jharia king's family wants royal museum in abandoned building". The Telegraph, 1 January 2019. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  34. ^ Specktor, Brandon (5 December 2018). "Scary Map Shows Where Animal Poop Is Turning into Deadly Ammonia Pollution". Live Science. Retrieved 18 August 2021.
  35. ^ Howard, Clare M.; Sutton, Mark A. (2018). "Satellite pinpoints ammonia sources globally". Nature. 564 (7734): 49–50. Bibcode:2018Natur.564...49S. doi:10.1038/d41586-018-07584-7. PMID 30518893.
  36. ^ "Adra Division Railway Map". South Eastern Railway.
  37. ^ "East Coast Railway System Map" (PDF). East Coast Railway.

External links

  • Official data on Jharia Block
  • Official map of Dhanbad district
  • Pictures of the coal town of Jharia

Further reading

  • Reinventing Jharia Coalfield. Edited by N.C. Saxena, Gurdeep Singh, K.N. Singh and B.N. Pan. Jodhpur, Scientific, 2005, vi, 246 p.. ISBN 81-7233-398-6.
  • "Satellites track the fires raging beneath India". New Scientist (2560). 18 July 2006.
  • Roychowdhury, Indronil (15 October 2006). "German major eyes Jharia coal fires". Kolkata Newsline. Retrieved 2 May 2009.
  • "India: Children of the Inferno". Unreported World. Season 17. Episode 7. 24 April 2009.
  • . The Hindu. 12 April 2009. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 2 May 2009.
  • "Web documentary about the people who live in proximity to the underground coal fires". Bombay Flying Club - www.bombayfc.com. 6 May 2009. Retrieved 2 May 2009.
  • eBook about the Jharia Coalfields, Zipfel, Isabell https://www.amazon.com/The-Jharia-Coalfields-ebook/dp/B0095I2AH4

jharia, neighbourhood, dhanbad, city, dhanbad, sadar, subdivision, dhanbad, district, jharkhand, state, india, economy, heavily, dependent, local, coal, fields, used, make, coke, however, fires, coal, fields, have, made, city, heavily, polluted, with, several,. Jharia is a neighbourhood in Dhanbad city in Dhanbad Sadar subdivision of Dhanbad district in Jharkhand state India Jharia s economy is heavily dependent on the local coal fields used to make coke However fires in the coal fields have made the city heavily polluted with several government studies recommending relocation of much of the population to nearby Belgaria 2 3 JhariaNeighbourhood in DhanbadJharia coalfieldJhariaLocation in Jharkhand IndiaShow map of JharkhandJhariaJharia India Show map of IndiaCoordinates 23 45 06 N 86 25 13 E 23 751568 N 86 420345 E 23 751568 86 420345 Coordinates 23 45 06 N 86 25 13 E 23 751568 N 86 420345 E 23 751568 86 420345CountryIndiaStateJharkhandDistrictDhanbadElevation77 m 253 ft Population 2001 Total81 979Languages OfficialHindi UrduTime zoneUTC 5 30 IST PIN828111Vehicle registrationJHWebsitedhanbad wbr nic wbr in 1 As of 2011 Jharia was the fifteenth largest town in the state of Jharkhand 4 Subsequently Jharia plays a very important role in the economy and development of the metropolitan area around Dhanbad City Contents 1 Governance 2 Geography 2 1 Location 2 2 Overview 2 3 Police station 3 Demographics 4 Relocation 5 Coal field 5 1 Coal field fire 6 Education 7 Ammonia pollution 8 Transport 9 See also 10 References 11 External links 11 1 Further readingGovernance EditCurrent Member of Parliament for Jharia is from is Pashupati Nath Singh from BJP who represents Dhanbad district in 2019 Lok Sabha Current Member of Legislative Assembly is Purnima Niraj Singh from congressGeography Edit Interactive fullscreen map Cities towns and locations in the central portion of Dhanbad Sadar subdivision in Dhanbad districtMC Municipal Corporation CT Census Town N Neighbourhood R Rural Urban centreOwing to space constraints in the small map the actual locations in a larger map may vary slightly Location Edit Jharia is located at 23 45 06 N 86 25 13 E 23 751568 N 86 420345 E 23 751568 86 420345 Note The map alongside presents some of the notable locations in the area All places marked in the map are linked in the larger full screen map Jharia earlier a census town was combined with other urban units to form Dhanbad Municipal Corporation in 2006 5 6 Jharia is spread over parts of Ward Nos 36 37 and 38 of Dhanbad Municipal Corporation 7 Overview Edit The region shown in the map is a part of the undulating uplands bustling with coalmines in the lowest rung of the Chota Nagpur Plateau The entire area shown in the map is under Dhanbad Municipal Corporation except Belgaria which is under Baliapur community development block The places in the DMC area are marked as neighbourhoods The DMC area shown in the map is around the core area of Dhanbad city Another major area of DMC is shown in the map of the southern portion of the district A small stretch of DMC extending up to Katras is shown in the map of the western portion The region is fully urbanised Jharia community development block has been merged into DMC Three operational areas of BCCL operate fully within the region Sijua Area Kusunda Area and Bastacola Area 8 9 10 11 12 13 Police station Edit There is a police station at Jharia 14 15 Demographics EditAs of 2001 update India census 16 Jharia had a population of 81 979 Males constitute 54 of the population and females 46 Jharia has an average literacy rate of 68 lower than the national average of 74 5 male literacy is 74 and female literacy is 60 In Jharia 14 of the population is under 6 years of age Relocation EditAccording to the state government this is the worst site of India the town of Jharia is to be shifted due to the uncontrollable coal mine fires see below which have found to be undousable leading to loss of property and lives Coal worth Rs 60 000 crore US 12 billion is lying unmined and the state government feels the shifting will help in exploiting this resource 17 The Jharia Rehabilitation and Development Authority is supposed to relocate much of the population to Belgaria and other towns nearby 2 However as of 2017 the organization was facing considerable challenges in acquiring land and doing construction 2 and a 2016 book reporting on the relocation effort found that the relocation was not accounting for Just Transition of jobs or adequate high quality housing 3 Coal field EditMain article Jharia coalfield Jharia Coal mine The coal field lies in the Damodar River Valley and covers about 110 square miles 280 square km and produces bituminous coal suitable for coke Most of India s coal comes from Jharia Jharia coal mines are India s most important storehouse 18 of prime coke coal used in blast furnaces it consists of 23 large underground and nine large open cast mines 17 The mining activities in these coalfields started in 1894 and had really intensified in 1925 The first Indians to arrive and break monopoly of British in Coal mining were Gujarati After the mines were nationalized in 1971 due to easy availability of coal many steel plants were set up in close proximity to Jharia Coal field fire Edit Jharia is famous for a coal field fire that has burned underground for a century The first fire was detected in 1916 17 According to records it was the Khas Jharia mines of Seth Khora Ramji who was a pioneer of Indian coalmines whose mines were one of the firsts to collapse in underground fire in 1930 Two of his collieries Khas Jharia and Golden Jharia which worked on maximum 260 foot deep shafts 19 collapsed due to now infamous underground fires in which their house and bungalow also collapsed on 8 November 1930 causing a six meter subsidence and widespread destruction 20 21 19 22 23 24 The fire never stopped despite sincere efforts by mines department and railway authorities and in 1933 flaming crevasses lead to exodus of many residents 19 The 1934 Nepal Bihar earthquake led to further spread of fire and by 1938 the authorities had declared that there is raging fire beneath the town with 42 collieries out of 133 on fire 25 In 1972 more than 70 mine fires were reported in this region As of 2007 more than 400 000 people who reside in Jharia are living on land in danger of subsidence due to the fires and according to Satya Pratap Singh Jharia township is on the brink of an ecological and human disaster 26 The government has been criticized for a perceived lackadaisical attitude 27 towards the safety of the people of Jharia 28 Heavy fumes emitted by the fires 29 lead to severe health problems such as breathing disorders and skin diseases among the local population 30 Education EditRaja Shiva Prasad College was established in 1951 at Bhagatdih Jharia It was shifted to Belgarhia 5 km away in 2018 because of an underground mine fire 31 32 33 Ammonia pollution EditIn 2018 researchers at Universite Libre de Bruxelles ULB in Belgium revealed a created map of global atmospheric ammonia by combining nine years of satellite data that show Jharia and surroundings are heavily ammonia polluted from burning coal mines 34 The emitted ammonia reacts rapidly with other air pollutants and thereby helps to form fine particulate matter that shortens the human lifespan through respiratory and coronary diseases Moreover the gaseous ammonia and ammonium compounds formed from it in the atmosphere are deposited into ecosystems throughout the Himalayas damaging sensitive habitats especially those naturally adapted to need clean air 35 Transport EditvteRailways in Jharia CoalfieldLegendkm kmBarkakana NetajiS C Bose Gomoh line toBarkakana 0 Netaji S C BoseGomoh Hatia line toBokaro 0 Asansol Gaya section to Gaya 500 N S C Bose GomohChandrapura 3417 5 KochargaraChandrapura TPS 9 TeloPatrakulhi Colliery Dugda Halt 30 44 Khario HaltDugda Coal Washery KKC main sidingDhanbad Chandrapuraline 39 KhanudihJamunia River KKC link sidingJamuniatanr Halt 27 37 BenidihJamuni Halt 24 22 PhulwartanrAdra Gomoh line 21 Budora Halt Tundu CollieryJamuniatand 38 18 Tundu HaltKharkhari 35 24 Ramakunda HaltMucheraidih 32 Malkera Kharkharidefunct loop lineMahuda Junction 30 20 MatariMurulidih Colliery 17 Sonardih HaltAsansol Tatanagar Kharagpur line toTalgaria 0 15 NichitpurMoonidih Colliery 14 TentuliaMalkera 24 Dhanbad Chandrapura lineMalkera Katrasgarhdefunct colliery line Katrasgarh 13 Salanpur CollieryAngarpathra Halt 11 Sijua 10 Dhanbad Gomoh lineBansjora 0 8 Baseria Halt 0 6 9 Tetulmari Kendua Colliery Kusunda 0 4 4 Bhuli Block HutKusunda Jharia branchline dismantled Dhanbad Jharia lineformer diamond crossing 0 DhanbadAdra Gomoh line 5 Dokra Halt Madhupur Giridih Koderma lineto New Giridih under construction 9 Pradhankhunta JunctionTSBD Colliery Asansol Gaya section to AsansolTata Sijua 20 Kankanee Colliery Pradhankhunta PathardihlineLayabad 18 14 RakshitpurLayabad Coking plant Dhanbad Jharia Pathardihline dismantled K S T siding 2 Dhansar HaltKarkend 16 4 Bastakulha HaltPootkee Colliery 6 Nayakanali HaltBhaga Goods Shed 7 JhariaBhaga 10 8 Kujama HaltBallihari Colliery 9 LodnaJitpur Colliery 10 Bagdigi Halt 11 Barari Bazar HaltJamadoba Halt 0 7 Barari Colliery C K SidingJBO Washery 22 Sindri Block HutMohalboni 0 6 14 Patherdih BazarBhowrah 0 4 163 Patherdih Junction Pathardih WasherySudamdih Washery Chasnalla Colliery 25 Sindri Marshalling YardSudamdih 0 0 27 Sindri TownAsansol Tatanagar Kharagpur line toBhojudih 0 Sindri FCI sidingkm kmSources 36 37 See also EditJharia RajReferences Edit Maps Weather and Airports for Jharia India a b c Living above a century old coal fire Jharia residents pay the price for India s mining ambitions Mongabay Environmental News 9 March 2017 Retrieved 2 August 2020 a b Pai Sandeep Carr Wilson Savannah 2018 Total Transition The Human Side of the Renewable Energy Revolution Rocky Mountain Books ISBN 978 1 77160 248 8 Jharkhand cities and town world gazetteer com dead link Dhanbad Municipal Corporation DMC Archived from the original on 15 October 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2017 Dhanbad Dsitrict Map Physical Map of Dhanbad Jharkhand Government Retrieved 15 October 2017 Dhanbad Municipal Corporation प र द श क न र व चन क ष त र क स च in Hindi Jharkhand Government Retrieved 19 October 2017 District Census Handbook Dhanbad PDF Series 21 Part XIIA pages 4 5 5 6 8 Directorate of Census Operations Jharkhand Retrieved 4 June 2019 2011 Census C D Block Wise Primary Census Abstract Data PCA Jharkhand District wise CD Blocks Registrar General and Census Commissioner India Retrieved 8 October 2017 Area Bharat Coking Coal Limited Retrieved 2 July 2019 Dhanbad Municipal Corporation DMC Archived from the original on 15 October 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2017 Dhanbad Dsitrict Map Physical Map of Dhanbad Jharkhand Government Archived from the original on 5 October 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2017 Dhanbad Municipal Corporation प र द श क न र व चन क ष त र क स च in Hindi Jharkhand Government Archived from the original on 28 October 2017 Retrieved 19 October 2017 Jharkhand Police Contact Numbers JP Retrieved 17 June 2019 Dhanbad Welcome to the Coal Capital of India Administrative Structure of Dhanbad District List of Thana and Outpost of Dhanbad Outpost Jharkhand Government Archived from the original on 24 October 2017 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Census of India 2001 Data from the 2001 Census including building cities villages farm and towns IMPORTANT NOTICE this site is not good Provisional Census Commission of India Archived from the original on 16 June 2004 Retrieved 1 November 2008 a b c Mishra Law Kumar 31 August 2006 Jharia to be shifted The Times of India Retrieved 24 January 2019 The Jharia coal field fire Archived from the original on 13 July 2007 Retrieved 17 January 2008 a b c Amin Samir Amin Shahid Linden Marcel van der 1997 Peripheral Labour Studies in the History of Partial Proletarianization edited by Shahid Amin Marcel van der Linden p 83 ISBN 9780521589000 Gazetteers of Bengal Assam Bihar amp Orissa 1917 Khora Ramji Colliries Khora Ramji Mines capsized in 1938 Diary of Golden Days at Jharia A Memoir amp History of Gurjar Kashtriya Samaj of Kutch in Coalfields of Jharia written by Natwarlal Devram Jethwa 1998 Page 12 Nanji Bapa ni Nondh pothi published in Gujarati in year 1999 from Vadodara It is a diary of Railway Contracts done by KGK community noted by Nanji Govindji Tank of Jamshedpur compiled by Dharsibhai Jethalal Tank Tatanagar Aank Sidhhi awarded to book by Kutch Shakti at Mumbai in 2000 Life Sketch of Seth Khora Ramji Chawra Page 76 1 The Jharia underground fire still raging first came to notice in November 1930 with subsidance at Seth Khora Ramji s Khas Jharia Colliery Page 159 He was told that Seth Khora Ramji whose mines lay underneath Jharia had chosen to live in his house which also collapsed in subsidance Page 160 The politics of labour under late colonialism workers unions and the state in Chota Nagpur 1928 1939 by Dilip Simeon Searchlight 24 January 1936 Hindustan Times 15 December 2007 dead link The Jharia mine fire control technical assistance project an analysis April 2004 Inside Coal Mine Fires a documentary 2005 ESTIMATION OF GAS EMISSIONS FROM SHALLOW SUBSURFACE COAL FIRES IN JHARIA COALFIELD In the line of fire indiatogether org RSP College Jharia in Retrieved 19 June 2019 New site for oldest school The Telegraph 8 October 201 Retrieved 19 June 2019 Jharia king s family wants royal museum in abandoned building The Telegraph 1 January 2019 Retrieved 19 June 2019 Specktor Brandon 5 December 2018 Scary Map Shows Where Animal Poop Is Turning into Deadly Ammonia Pollution Live Science Retrieved 18 August 2021 Howard Clare M Sutton Mark A 2018 Satellite pinpoints ammonia sources globally Nature 564 7734 49 50 Bibcode 2018Natur 564 49S doi 10 1038 d41586 018 07584 7 PMID 30518893 Adra Division Railway Map South Eastern Railway East Coast Railway System Map PDF East Coast Railway External links EditOfficial data on Jharia Block Official map of Dhanbad district Pictures of the coal town of JhariaFurther reading Edit Reinventing Jharia Coalfield Edited by N C Saxena Gurdeep Singh K N Singh and B N Pan Jodhpur Scientific 2005 vi 246 p ISBN 81 7233 398 6 Satellites track the fires raging beneath India New Scientist 2560 18 July 2006 Roychowdhury Indronil 15 October 2006 German major eyes Jharia coal fires Kolkata Newsline Retrieved 2 May 2009 India Children of the Inferno Unreported World Season 17 Episode 7 24 April 2009 Coal mine fires an election issue in Jharkhand The Hindu 12 April 2009 Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 2 May 2009 Web documentary about the people who live in proximity to the underground coal fires Bombay Flying Club www bombayfc com 6 May 2009 Retrieved 2 May 2009 eBook about the Jharia Coalfields Zipfel Isabell https www amazon com The Jharia Coalfields ebook dp B0095I2AH4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jharia amp oldid 1084336845, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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