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Lae

Lae (/ˈlɑː, ˈli/[1]) is the capital of Morobe Province and is the second-largest city in Papua New Guinea. It is located near the delta of the Markham River and at the start of the Highlands Highway, which is the main land transport corridor between the Highlands Region and the coast. Lae is the largest cargo port of the country and is the industrial hub of Papua New Guinea. The city is known as the Garden City and home of the University of Technology.[2]

Lae
City
Welcome signs on approach from Nadzab airport
Lae
Location within Papua New Guinea
Coordinates: 06°43′49″S 147°00′03″E / 6.73028°S 147.00083°E / -6.73028; 147.00083Coordinates: 06°43′49″S 147°00′03″E / 6.73028°S 147.00083°E / -6.73028; 147.00083
Country Papua New Guinea
ProvinceMorobe
DistrictLae
LLGLae Urban LLG
Elevation
8 m (26 ft)
Population
 (2012)
 • City100,677
 • Rank2nd
 • Urban
193,000~
Time zoneUTC+10 (PGT)
ClimateAf

History

 
Panoramic photo of Lae city taken from top of the Hodgson Nagi (Telikom) building, Lae. Governors residence to the left. Port to the right. Taken 29 January 2014

Lucas (1972)[3] describes the history of Lae into four periods; the mission phase (1886–1920), the gold phase (1926 until World War II), the timber and agricultural phase (until 1965) and the industrial boom (from 1965) with the opening of the Highlands Highway.[4]

Between 1884 and 1918 the German New Guinea Company established trading posts in Kaiser Wilhelmsland, German New Guinea and on 12 July 1886, a German missionary, Johann Flierl, a pioneer missionary for the Southern Australian Lutheran Synod and the Neuendettelsau Mission Society, sailed to Simbang in Finschhafen, Kaiser-Wilhelmsland and arrived at Lae shortly after.[5] The mission society provided clergy and religious education for Lutheran settlements in Missouri, Iowa and Ohio, Australia, and anywhere else "free thinking" Lutherans had settled.[6]

After World War I, Eastern New Guinea came under British control (Australia) and many of the Germanic names were replaced by English or indigenous ones. Adolf Haven was then referred to as Morobe Harbour.[7] Australian officials or kiaps were stationed at various locations within the area[8] and in 1921 the military administration transitioned to a civilian administration, a gold prospector named Cecil John Levien was appointed District Officer (Kiap) of Morobe.

 
Evangelical Lutheran Church Lutheran Lite building in Top Town overlooking the Huon Gulf
 
St. Mary Catholic Church, Top Town, Lae.
 
Monument at the old RSL building. Site marks the location when on 16 September 1943 Kenneth Eather from 25th Brigade raised the Australian flag following the defeat of the Japanese.

On 1 January 1923 Levien acquired a mining right for the area and shortly after formed a syndicate called Guinea Gold (No Liability).[9] The Guinea Gold syndicate formed Guinea Airways Limited in November 1927.[10] In 1927 Levien arranged for the construction of the airstrip at Lae to assist the gold mine productions around Wau.[11]

Lae was declared a town under the New Guinea Boundaries Ordinance on 31 March 1931 at the height of the gold rush era[12] and Lae became the prototype for New Guinean towns built up around airstrips.[4] The Europeans lived to the East of Lae Airfield while the New Guineans lived to the West.[4] Cargo arrived in Lae and then was transported by air to the goldfields in Wau.

In July 1937, Lae made world news when American aviator Amelia Earhart was last seen flying out of the airport on her way back to the United States. She was never seen again.

When the volcanic eruptions occurred in Rabaul in 1937, a decision was made to transfer the capital of the Territory of New Guinea to Lae. World War II impeded the transfer and the town was occupied by the Empire of Japan on 8 March 1942. Lae, Rabaul and Salamaua became the major Japanese bases in New Guinea.

The naval Battle of the Bismarck Sea in March 1943[13] was fought over the Japanese attempt to reinforce Lae with troops sent by sea from Rabaul, an attempt foiled by sustained Allied attack on the Japanese troop transports. In mid-1943, after defeats in the Kokoda Track campaign, the Battle of Buna–Gona and the Battle of Wau, the Japanese retreated to Lae and Salamaua. However, the Salamaua–Lae campaign involved many weeks of fierce fighting, before the town fell to the Allies on 16 September.

 
Old RSL building overlooking Huon Gulf.

In 1971 the Australian Colonial Administration established the first properly constituted Local Government of Lae town and in 1972 Lae was proclaimed a city.[2] Lae's development after the war is directly linked to the development of the highlands. Coffee and tea were being grown and a port was needed. Later priority was given on road access, and the Highlands Highway came into existence. The mineral boom occurred in the 1980s and 1990s.

Geology

Lae is located on the Pacific Ring of Fire and geologic instability has produced numerous faults, resulting in earthquakes.[14][15]

Lae sits between the larger Indo-Australian Plate and the Pacific Plate on the South Bismarck Plate in the Ramu-Markham Fault Zone where the New Guinea Highlands Deforming Zone and South Bismarck tectonic plates are converging at up to 50 mm/yr. The city is caught in a giant geological vise and the seismic hazard is significant.[16]

More than 15 years of measurements have been analysed with results indicating how rapidly Lae city and its survey network is deforming.[16]

The Ramu-Markham Fault Zone, which follows the northern edge of the Markham Valley, is the active plate boundary between the South Bismarck Plate and tectonostratigraphic terranes within the New Guinea Highlands Deforming Zone. The Ramu-Markham Fault Zone has generated large thrust earthquakes (e.g. 6 April 1999 MW 6.4, 16 km North of Lae, near Hobu, and 22 November 2007 MW 6.8, 110 km North of Lae). Geological evidence suggests that major earthquakes in pre-historic times have occurred in the Lae area,[17] and that there is the potential for another large earthquake to occur anytime within the next 100 years[17][18] (in).[16]

The 1998 earthquake occurred near Vanimo resulting in 2200 casualties.[19]

Mount Lunaman

Mount Lunaman is 96 metres (315 ft) high and has a radio tower at the highest point marked by red fixed obstruction lights to assist navigation.[20] At the base of Mount Lunaman at the southern and south-eastern face are the suburbs of Voco Point and Chinatown. The terraces are located to the West of Mount Lunaman.

Mount Lunaman is known to the locals as Lo' Wamung, which means "first hill",[21] Hospital Hill[22] and Fortress Hill by the German settlers.[23]

Mount Lunaman and the Lae urban area have been the subject of several tectonic studies relating to plate shift.[24]

Mount Lunaman was an important landmark for both Japanese and the Allies:

"The men of the South Australian battalion hammered and sawed vigorously at the top of the terrace. They were reconstructing, with captured Japanese tools, the skeleton of the cottage formerly used as the Japanese commander's sanctum. A hole beneath the door led by a tunnel to a labyrinth of passages and apertures which honeycombed Mount Lunaman".[25]

After the war it was believed that Mount Lunaman contained the remains of many Japanese soldiers who defended Lae using tunnels:

 
Still extant Japanese World War II tunnel in Mt Lunaman. Looking out towards Chinatown.
A Japanese tomb believed to contain bodies of hundreds of Lae defenders was bought by two South Australian men for 1 pound. The tomb lies under Mount Lunaman which is said to house a hospital and when the Japanese in tunnels refused to surrender to the Australian 7th Division and 9th Division troops in 1943 all entrances were sealed.[26] In a 1971 NHK interview with the Japanese Army commander of Lae, he stated that the tunnels in the hill were only ever used for storage, and the Army had used the Lutheran Malahang Hospital some 10 km north of the town.

Government

The Lae City Council is also known as Lae Urban Local-Level Government. It is an Urban Municipal Authority, responsible for the policy decisions, management and administration of the city, by way of providing the municipal services to the residents of the city.[2]

Lae City Aims to become one of the Garden Cities of Asia Pacific Region by 2012, by creating a modern, safe, vibrant City, with a strong economy, whilst enhancing its cultural heritage, and by developing a Healthy, well Educated, Harmonious Community, which will enjoys a good living environment.[2]

The Lae Urban Local-Level Government is a third-tier government. The political structure consists of the Lord Mayor as the head, who is elected by the people, with five elected, and three nominated Councilors. The six elected Councilors representing the six Wards in the city. The nominated Councilors represented the Chamber of Commerce, the Workers Federation Union, and the Women, Youth and Churches. The Council makes decisions on the policy issues relating to the city, and the Council Management implement the decisions.[2]

Roads

The Lae City has 137 kilometers of roads, which the National Government is responsible for the maintenance of the Independence Drive, the Markham Road, and the Milford Haven Road, while the Lae City Council maintains the rest of the roads in the city. Due to lack of funding, almost all the roads have deteriorated over the years.[2]

Climate

Lae features a tropical rainforest climate under Köppen's climate classification, more subject to the Intertropical Convergence Zone than the trade winds and with no cyclones so equatorial. The area experiences an extraordinary amount of precipitation, averaging roughly 4,500 millimetres (180 in) of rainfall annually. In fact in no month does Lae, on average, see less than 200 millimetres (7.9 in) of precipitation. Temperatures show little variance during a typical year in the city, with January temperatures averaging roughly 28 °C (82 °F) and July temperatures averaging 25 °C (77 °F).

Climate data for Lae
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 31.5
(88.7)
31.5
(88.7)
31.0
(87.8)
30.5
(86.9)
29.8
(85.6)
28.8
(83.8)
28.1
(82.6)
28.0
(82.4)
28.7
(83.7)
29.6
(85.3)
30.5
(86.9)
31.1
(88.0)
29.9
(85.8)
Average low °C (°F) 24.3
(75.7)
24.2
(75.6)
24.2
(75.6)
23.9
(75.0)
23.6
(74.5)
23.0
(73.4)
22.4
(72.3)
22.3
(72.1)
22.6
(72.7)
23.2
(73.8)
23.7
(74.7)
23.9
(75.0)
23.4
(74.1)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 241.6
(9.51)
239.9
(9.44)
281.1
(11.07)
347.4
(13.68)
348.9
(13.74)
502.8
(19.80)
477.9
(18.81)
516.9
(20.35)
360.9
(14.21)
442.4
(17.42)
334.9
(13.19)
338.2
(13.31)
4,432.9
(174.52)
Average rainy days 16 17 18 21 21 21 24 24 22 22 21 19 246
Source: World Meteorological Organisation[27]

Economy

Industry

Lae is strategically located in that it can supply the Highlands, Islands, Southern and Momase regions. Large businesses include:

  • Mainland Holdings Ltd
  • DuluxGroup (PNG) Ltd
  • Consort Express Lines
  • Paradise Foods Limited
  • Halla Cement
  • HBS PNG Limited
  • iPi Group
  • Trukai Rice
  • SP Brewery
  • Bismark Maritime
  • South Pacific Steel
  • Papindo Group of Companies
  • Prima Smallgoods
  • Lae Biscuit Factory
  • Citylink Motel
  • MMK Transport
  • Barlow Industries Ltd
  • Mapai Transport
  • PNG Metal Fabricators Ltd
  • Araweld Ltd
  • Homestate Co-operation
  • NCI Packaging (PNG) Ltd
  • Esteens Deering (PNG) Ltd
  • Niugini Electrical Ltd

Markets

Lae City boasts of having the best food market in Papua New Guinea.[citation needed] This is due to the fact that the Morobe Province produces the best taros, bananas, sweet potatoes, yams, fruits and vegetables etc., which have been sought after by many Papua New Guineans as well as expatriates. The Lae Main Market also receives and sells foodstuff and vegetables from the Highlands Provinces. Apart from Lae Main Market, wards and mini-markets are also available to cater for the needs of the growing population of the city.[2]

Notable landmarks

 
RAAF C47 located in Lae Botanical Gardens

University of Technology

The Papua New Guinea University of Technology is based 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) outside Lae and is the second largest university in PNG after its 'sister' university the University of Papua New Guinea in Port Moresby. While University of Papua New Guinea concentrates on the arts, pure sciences, law and medicine, the University of Technology focuses on research in technological or applied sciences. It is the only technological university in the South Pacific, outside Australia and New Zealand.[28]

Lae International Hotel

Lae International Hotel is an important conference centre and has hosted some notable political figures over the years.[29] Lae International Hotel (6°43′50″S 147°0′21″E / 6.73056°S 147.00583°E / -6.73056; 147.00583) has 100 rooms, furnished with wooden furnitures and 4 luxury suites. It contains the Vanda Restaurant, Luluai's Italian Restaurant and Kokomo Coffee Shop.[30]

 
Photo of Lae International Hotel, 4th Street Lae

Lae War Cemetery

Lae War Cemetery was established in 1944, and is located adjacent to the Botanical Gardens in the centre of the city. The cemetery holds the remains of over 2,800 soldiers, many of whom died in the Salamaua–Lae campaign, but also those who died in Japanese detention on the Island. It is also the resting place of two Victoria Cross recipients.

Lae Botanic Gardens

Lae Botanic gardens are not always open to the public. There is an old Australian Aeroplane in the centre of the gardens.

The aircraft is a C47 Dakota, RAAF serial number A65-122. It was purchased from the USAAF for the price of $180,000 and delivered to the RAAF on 4 July 1945. From 1947, the aircraft was allocated to No 86 Wing and flew with No 36 and 38 Squadrons from RAAF Bases Schofields, Richmond and Canberra. During this time, it probably flew some of the Japan Courier flights and flights to PNG.

From Feb 1967 until June 1980, the aircraft served with Transport Support Flight, Butterworth Malaysia, where it flew missions to South Vietnam and other countries in SE Asia.

On 30 June 1980, it departed Butterworth for RAAF East Sale where it was prepared for donation to the PNGDF. On 17 Nov 1980, the aircraft was handed over to the PNGDF at Lae for use as a ground training aid.

On 30th June 1999 the PNGDF decided that the aircraft was no longer required for training purposes and needed considerable maintenance with no funds available, it was donated to the National Botanic Garden Management Committee. Under the direction of the Curator at that time, Mr. Rod Spivey, it was moved to a suitable location at the National Botanical Gardens, and funds and manpower were provided by various private sector organisations, to return the Aircraft to much of its former splendour.

Bumbu river

The Bumbu river starts at the Adzera Mountain range, through Taraka to Kamkumung, Hengali, Butibam, and to the Huon Gulf. Following a flood in 1992, the population was relocated to a temporary settlement called Tent Siti (City).[2]

Angau General Hospital

Angau General Hospital is located in the central Lae area next to the old Lae Airfield. It is a main referral hospital for the general Morobe Province area, as well as the other provinces connected by road link . It contains the only Radiotherapy facility in the country and thus serves as the main referral centre for cancer patients.

Lae (Nadzab) Airport

Nadzab Airport is located 56 kilometres (35 mi) outside Lae City, along the Highlands Highway, next to the Markham River. Local buses operate to and from the city, in addition escorted secured transfers are available for transport into the city.

From Port Moresby, Lae is accessible only by domestic flights. Air Niugini, Airlines of Papua New Guinea (also known as "Airlines PNG") and Travel Air "Mangi lo Ples" services the Port Moresby-Lae route.

Other significant locations

 
Lae Yacht Club
  • Sir Ignatius Kilage Stadium
  • Lae Golf Course
  • National Polytechnic Institute of Papua New Guinea
  • Lae City Hotel
  • Hotel Morobe
  • Lae Yacht Club
  • Lae Showgrounds
  • Papindo Shopping Centre at 7th Street

Healthcare

Visitors must ensure that they have proper health insurance. Lae International Hospital is of good developing world standard. It is a 19-bed facility with 1 emergency bed. It is staffed by 6 doctors, one general practitioner, an anesthesiologist, a surgeon, a radiologist, and two obstetricians. Doctors come from a number of countries, nurses are local nationals. There is also a public hospital called Angau Memorial Hospital located on Markham Road.

Travellers to Lae should seek expert medical advice regarding malaria prophylaxis as well as hepatitis A, hepatitis B, Japanese encephalitis and typhoid vaccinations. There was a significant outbreak of cholera based in the Morobe District in 2009 and consideration of vaccination would be prudent.[31]

Twin town

See also

References

  1. ^ "Lae". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h . morobepng.com. Archived from the original on 19 February 2015.
  3. ^ Lucas, John (June 1972). "Lae – A Town in Transition". Oceania. 4. 42 (4): 260–275. doi:10.1002/j.1834-4461.1972.tb01181.x. JSTOR 40330020.
  4. ^ a b c Suzanne Romaine (1992). Language, Education, and Development: Urban and Rural Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea. Oxford University Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-19-823966-6.
  5. ^ . elcpng.org.pg. Archived from the original on 30 November 2012.
  6. ^ Garrett, p. 3–4; Löhe, Johann Konrad Wilhelm (New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, Vol. VII)
  7. ^ Wurm, S. Mühlhäusler, P, Tyron, D & de Gruyter, W 1996, Intercultural communication in Atlas of Languages of Intercultural Communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas, Volume 1 to GoogleBooks
  8. ^ . ucsd.edu. Archived from the original on 7 January 2014.
  9. ^ Kernot, C, 1999, Valuing Mining Companies: A Guide to the Assessment and Evaluation of Assets, Performance, and Prospects in Business and Economics CRC Press [1]
  10. ^ Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 10, (MUP), 1986 Levien, Cecil John (1874–1932) [2]
  11. ^ Lipscomb, A, McKinnon, R & Murray, J 1998 Lonely Planet
  12. ^ Mason, L, & Hereniko, P, 1987 In Search of a Home, University of the South Pacific. Institute of Pacific Studies, 982010016X, 9789820100169
  13. ^ "Battle of the Bismarck Sea, 2-4 March 1943". awm.gov.au.
  14. ^ USGS. . Archived from the original on 28 July 2010. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  15. ^ Earthquake Track. "Recent Earthquake Near New Guinea, Papua New Guinea". Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  16. ^ a b c 43rd Association of Surveyors PNG Congress, Lae; Richard Stanaway; Laura Wallace; Zebedee Sombo; Johnson Peter; Trevor Palusi; Ben Safomea; John Nathan (12–15 August 2009). "Lae, a City caught between two plates – 15 years of Deformation Measurements with GPS" (PDF). Focus on Challenges; Society-Space-Surveyors.
  17. ^ a b Crook, Keith A.W. (June 1989). "Quaternary uplift rates at a plate boundary, Lae urban area, Papua New Guinea" (PDF). Tectonophysics. 163 (1–2): 105–118. Bibcode:1989Tectp.163..105C. doi:10.1016/0040-1951(89)90121-2.
  18. ^ Ripper, I.D.; Anton, L. (1987). "Seismic hazard, Lae". Papua New Guinea Geological Survey Report. 95/2.
  19. ^ "Tidal wave kills 'thousands'". BBC News. 20 July 1998. Retrieved 2 April 2007.
  20. ^ Prostar Sailing Directions 2004 New Guinea Enroute. ProStar Publications. 1 January 2004. p. 164. ISBN 978-1-57785-569-9.
  21. ^ "Mt Lunaman". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  22. ^ John Laffin (1956). Return to Glory. Angus and Robertson. p. 77.
  23. ^ Fodor's Australia, New Zealand, and the South Pacific. D. McKay. 1989. p. 574. ISBN 9780679015987.
  24. ^ Crook, Keith A.W (10 June 1989). "Quaternary uplift rates at a plate boundary, Lae urban area, Papua New Guinea". Tectonophysics. 163 (1, 2): 105–118. Bibcode:1989Tectp.163..105C. doi:10.1016/0040-1951(89)90121-2.
  25. ^ Semmler, Clement, ed. (1987). The war dispatches of Kenneth Slessor, official Australian correspondent, 1940–1944 (1. publ. ed.). St. Lucia, Qld., Australia: University of Queensland Press. p. 382. ISBN 978-0702220760.
  26. ^ "Odd Deal at Lae Sales". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 26 November 1946. p. 7 – via National Library of Australia.
  27. ^ "World Weather Information Service — Lae City". World Meteorological Organisation. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
  28. ^ University of Technology website\Papua_New_Guinea_University_of_Technology
  29. ^ Australian foreign affairs and trade, Volume 63, Dept. of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Australia. (1992)
  30. ^ Tony Wheeler, Jon Murray (1993). Papua New Guinea: a travel survival kit (5 ed.). Lonely Planet. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-86442-190-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  31. ^ Clonal Origins of Vibrio cholerae O1 El Tor Strains, Papua New Guinea, 2009–2011

External links

  • Bombing of Lae
  • Captured airfields at Lae
  • Raising Australian flag at Lae

other, uses, disambiguation, ɑː, capital, morobe, province, second, largest, city, papua, guinea, located, near, delta, markham, river, start, highlands, highway, which, main, land, transport, corridor, between, highlands, region, coast, largest, cargo, port, . For other uses see Lae disambiguation Lae ˈ l ɑː eɪ ˈ l eɪ i 1 is the capital of Morobe Province and is the second largest city in Papua New Guinea It is located near the delta of the Markham River and at the start of the Highlands Highway which is the main land transport corridor between the Highlands Region and the coast Lae is the largest cargo port of the country and is the industrial hub of Papua New Guinea The city is known as the Garden City and home of the University of Technology 2 LaeCityWelcome signs on approach from Nadzab airportLaeLocation within Papua New GuineaCoordinates 06 43 49 S 147 00 03 E 6 73028 S 147 00083 E 6 73028 147 00083 Coordinates 06 43 49 S 147 00 03 E 6 73028 S 147 00083 E 6 73028 147 00083Country Papua New GuineaProvinceMorobeDistrictLaeLLGLae Urban LLGElevation8 m 26 ft Population 2012 City100 677 Rank2nd Urban193 000 Time zoneUTC 10 PGT ClimateAf Contents 1 History 2 Geology 2 1 Mount Lunaman 3 Government 3 1 Roads 4 Climate 5 Economy 5 1 Industry 6 Markets 7 Notable landmarks 7 1 University of Technology 7 2 Lae International Hotel 7 3 Lae War Cemetery 7 4 Lae Botanic Gardens 7 5 Bumbu river 7 6 Angau General Hospital 7 7 Lae Nadzab Airport 7 8 Other significant locations 8 Healthcare 9 Twin town 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Lae Panoramic photo of Lae city taken from top of the Hodgson Nagi Telikom building Lae Governors residence to the left Port to the right Taken 29 January 2014 Lucas 1972 3 describes the history of Lae into four periods the mission phase 1886 1920 the gold phase 1926 until World War II the timber and agricultural phase until 1965 and the industrial boom from 1965 with the opening of the Highlands Highway 4 Between 1884 and 1918 the German New Guinea Company established trading posts in Kaiser Wilhelmsland German New Guinea and on 12 July 1886 a German missionary Johann Flierl a pioneer missionary for the Southern Australian Lutheran Synod and the Neuendettelsau Mission Society sailed to Simbang in Finschhafen Kaiser Wilhelmsland and arrived at Lae shortly after 5 The mission society provided clergy and religious education for Lutheran settlements in Missouri Iowa and Ohio Australia and anywhere else free thinking Lutherans had settled 6 After World War I Eastern New Guinea came under British control Australia and many of the Germanic names were replaced by English or indigenous ones Adolf Haven was then referred to as Morobe Harbour 7 Australian officials or kiaps were stationed at various locations within the area 8 and in 1921 the military administration transitioned to a civilian administration a gold prospector named Cecil John Levien was appointed District Officer Kiap of Morobe Evangelical Lutheran Church Lutheran Lite building in Top Town overlooking the Huon Gulf St Mary Catholic Church Top Town Lae Monument at the old RSL building Site marks the location when on 16 September 1943 Kenneth Eather from 25th Brigade raised the Australian flag following the defeat of the Japanese On 1 January 1923 Levien acquired a mining right for the area and shortly after formed a syndicate called Guinea Gold No Liability 9 The Guinea Gold syndicate formed Guinea Airways Limited in November 1927 10 In 1927 Levien arranged for the construction of the airstrip at Lae to assist the gold mine productions around Wau 11 Lae was declared a town under the New Guinea Boundaries Ordinance on 31 March 1931 at the height of the gold rush era 12 and Lae became the prototype for New Guinean towns built up around airstrips 4 The Europeans lived to the East of Lae Airfield while the New Guineans lived to the West 4 Cargo arrived in Lae and then was transported by air to the goldfields in Wau In July 1937 Lae made world news when American aviator Amelia Earhart was last seen flying out of the airport on her way back to the United States She was never seen again When the volcanic eruptions occurred in Rabaul in 1937 a decision was made to transfer the capital of the Territory of New Guinea to Lae World War II impeded the transfer and the town was occupied by the Empire of Japan on 8 March 1942 Lae Rabaul and Salamaua became the major Japanese bases in New Guinea The naval Battle of the Bismarck Sea in March 1943 13 was fought over the Japanese attempt to reinforce Lae with troops sent by sea from Rabaul an attempt foiled by sustained Allied attack on the Japanese troop transports In mid 1943 after defeats in the Kokoda Track campaign the Battle of Buna Gona and the Battle of Wau the Japanese retreated to Lae and Salamaua However the Salamaua Lae campaign involved many weeks of fierce fighting before the town fell to the Allies on 16 September Old RSL building overlooking Huon Gulf In 1971 the Australian Colonial Administration established the first properly constituted Local Government of Lae town and in 1972 Lae was proclaimed a city 2 Lae s development after the war is directly linked to the development of the highlands Coffee and tea were being grown and a port was needed Later priority was given on road access and the Highlands Highway came into existence The mineral boom occurred in the 1980s and 1990s Geology EditMain article List of earthquakes in Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea and tectonic plates Pacific Plate Australian Plate Caroline Plate Banda Sea Plate as Mer de Banda Woodlark Plate Bird s Head Plate Maoke Plate Solomon Sea Plate North Bismarck Plate South Bismarck Plate and Manus Plate in French Lae is located on the Pacific Ring of Fire and geologic instability has produced numerous faults resulting in earthquakes 14 15 Lae sits between the larger Indo Australian Plate and the Pacific Plate on the South Bismarck Plate in the Ramu Markham Fault Zone where the New Guinea Highlands Deforming Zone and South Bismarck tectonic plates are converging at up to 50 mm yr The city is caught in a giant geological vise and the seismic hazard is significant 16 More than 15 years of measurements have been analysed with results indicating how rapidly Lae city and its survey network is deforming 16 The Ramu Markham Fault Zone which follows the northern edge of the Markham Valley is the active plate boundary between the South Bismarck Plate and tectonostratigraphic terranes within the New Guinea Highlands Deforming Zone The Ramu Markham Fault Zone has generated large thrust earthquakes e g 6 April 1999 MW 6 4 16 km North of Lae near Hobu and 22 November 2007 MW 6 8 110 km North of Lae Geological evidence suggests that major earthquakes in pre historic times have occurred in the Lae area 17 and that there is the potential for another large earthquake to occur anytime within the next 100 years 17 18 in 16 The 1998 earthquake occurred near Vanimo resulting in 2200 casualties 19 Mount Lunaman Edit Mount Lunaman is 96 metres 315 ft high and has a radio tower at the highest point marked by red fixed obstruction lights to assist navigation 20 At the base of Mount Lunaman at the southern and south eastern face are the suburbs of Voco Point and Chinatown The terraces are located to the West of Mount Lunaman Mount Lunaman is known to the locals as Lo Wamung which means first hill 21 Hospital Hill 22 and Fortress Hill by the German settlers 23 Mount Lunaman and the Lae urban area have been the subject of several tectonic studies relating to plate shift 24 Mount Lunaman was an important landmark for both Japanese and the Allies The men of the South Australian battalion hammered and sawed vigorously at the top of the terrace They were reconstructing with captured Japanese tools the skeleton of the cottage formerly used as the Japanese commander s sanctum A hole beneath the door led by a tunnel to a labyrinth of passages and apertures which honeycombed Mount Lunaman 25 After the war it was believed that Mount Lunaman contained the remains of many Japanese soldiers who defended Lae using tunnels Still extant Japanese World War II tunnel in Mt Lunaman Looking out towards Chinatown A Japanese tomb believed to contain bodies of hundreds of Lae defenders was bought by two South Australian men for 1 pound The tomb lies under Mount Lunaman which is said to house a hospital and when the Japanese in tunnels refused to surrender to the Australian 7th Division and 9th Division troops in 1943 all entrances were sealed 26 In a 1971 NHK interview with the Japanese Army commander of Lae he stated that the tunnels in the hill were only ever used for storage and the Army had used the Lutheran Malahang Hospital some 10 km north of the town Government EditThe Lae City Council is also known as Lae Urban Local Level Government It is an Urban Municipal Authority responsible for the policy decisions management and administration of the city by way of providing the municipal services to the residents of the city 2 Lae City Aims to become one of the Garden Cities of Asia Pacific Region by 2012 by creating a modern safe vibrant City with a strong economy whilst enhancing its cultural heritage and by developing a Healthy well Educated Harmonious Community which will enjoys a good living environment 2 The Lae Urban Local Level Government is a third tier government The political structure consists of the Lord Mayor as the head who is elected by the people with five elected and three nominated Councilors The six elected Councilors representing the six Wards in the city The nominated Councilors represented the Chamber of Commerce the Workers Federation Union and the Women Youth and Churches The Council makes decisions on the policy issues relating to the city and the Council Management implement the decisions 2 Roads Edit The Lae City has 137 kilometers of roads which the National Government is responsible for the maintenance of the Independence Drive the Markham Road and the Milford Haven Road while the Lae City Council maintains the rest of the roads in the city Due to lack of funding almost all the roads have deteriorated over the years 2 Climate EditLae features a tropical rainforest climate under Koppen s climate classification more subject to the Intertropical Convergence Zone than the trade winds and with no cyclones so equatorial The area experiences an extraordinary amount of precipitation averaging roughly 4 500 millimetres 180 in of rainfall annually In fact in no month does Lae on average see less than 200 millimetres 7 9 in of precipitation Temperatures show little variance during a typical year in the city with January temperatures averaging roughly 28 C 82 F and July temperatures averaging 25 C 77 F Climate data for LaeMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 31 5 88 7 31 5 88 7 31 0 87 8 30 5 86 9 29 8 85 6 28 8 83 8 28 1 82 6 28 0 82 4 28 7 83 7 29 6 85 3 30 5 86 9 31 1 88 0 29 9 85 8 Average low C F 24 3 75 7 24 2 75 6 24 2 75 6 23 9 75 0 23 6 74 5 23 0 73 4 22 4 72 3 22 3 72 1 22 6 72 7 23 2 73 8 23 7 74 7 23 9 75 0 23 4 74 1 Average rainfall mm inches 241 6 9 51 239 9 9 44 281 1 11 07 347 4 13 68 348 9 13 74 502 8 19 80 477 9 18 81 516 9 20 35 360 9 14 21 442 4 17 42 334 9 13 19 338 2 13 31 4 432 9 174 52 Average rainy days 16 17 18 21 21 21 24 24 22 22 21 19 246Source World Meteorological Organisation 27 Economy EditIndustry Edit Lae is strategically located in that it can supply the Highlands Islands Southern and Momase regions Large businesses include Mainland Holdings Ltd DuluxGroup PNG Ltd Consort Express Lines Paradise Foods Limited Halla Cement HBS PNG Limited iPi Group Trukai Rice SP Brewery Bismark Maritime South Pacific Steel Papindo Group of Companies Prima Smallgoods Lae Biscuit Factory Citylink Motel MMK Transport Barlow Industries Ltd Mapai Transport PNG Metal Fabricators Ltd Araweld Ltd Homestate Co operation NCI Packaging PNG Ltd Esteens Deering PNG Ltd Niugini Electrical LtdMarkets EditLae City boasts of having the best food market in Papua New Guinea citation needed This is due to the fact that the Morobe Province produces the best taros bananas sweet potatoes yams fruits and vegetables etc which have been sought after by many Papua New Guineans as well as expatriates The Lae Main Market also receives and sells foodstuff and vegetables from the Highlands Provinces Apart from Lae Main Market wards and mini markets are also available to cater for the needs of the growing population of the city 2 Notable landmarks Edit RAAF C47 located in Lae Botanical Gardens University of Technology Edit Main article Papua New Guinea University of Technology The Papua New Guinea University of Technology is based 8 kilometres 5 0 mi outside Lae and is the second largest university in PNG after its sister university the University of Papua New Guinea in Port Moresby While University of Papua New Guinea concentrates on the arts pure sciences law and medicine the University of Technology focuses on research in technological or applied sciences It is the only technological university in the South Pacific outside Australia and New Zealand 28 Lae International Hotel Edit Lae International Hotel is an important conference centre and has hosted some notable political figures over the years 29 Lae International Hotel 6 43 50 S 147 0 21 E 6 73056 S 147 00583 E 6 73056 147 00583 has 100 rooms furnished with wooden furnitures and 4 luxury suites It contains the Vanda Restaurant Luluai s Italian Restaurant and Kokomo Coffee Shop 30 Photo of Lae International Hotel 4th Street Lae Lae War Cemetery Edit Main article Lae War Cemetery Lae War Cemetery was established in 1944 and is located adjacent to the Botanical Gardens in the centre of the city The cemetery holds the remains of over 2 800 soldiers many of whom died in the Salamaua Lae campaign but also those who died in Japanese detention on the Island It is also the resting place of two Victoria Cross recipients Lae Botanic Gardens Edit Main article Lae Botanic Gardens Lae Botanic gardens are not always open to the public There is an old Australian Aeroplane in the centre of the gardens The aircraft is a C47 Dakota RAAF serial number A65 122 It was purchased from the USAAF for the price of 180 000 and delivered to the RAAF on 4 July 1945 From 1947 the aircraft was allocated to No 86 Wing and flew with No 36 and 38 Squadrons from RAAF Bases Schofields Richmond and Canberra During this time it probably flew some of the Japan Courier flights and flights to PNG From Feb 1967 until June 1980 the aircraft served with Transport Support Flight Butterworth Malaysia where it flew missions to South Vietnam and other countries in SE Asia On 30 June 1980 it departed Butterworth for RAAF East Sale where it was prepared for donation to the PNGDF On 17 Nov 1980 the aircraft was handed over to the PNGDF at Lae for use as a ground training aid On 30th June 1999 the PNGDF decided that the aircraft was no longer required for training purposes and needed considerable maintenance with no funds available it was donated to the National Botanic Garden Management Committee Under the direction of the Curator at that time Mr Rod Spivey it was moved to a suitable location at the National Botanical Gardens and funds and manpower were provided by various private sector organisations to return the Aircraft to much of its former splendour Bumbu river Edit The Bumbu river starts at the Adzera Mountain range through Taraka to Kamkumung Hengali Butibam and to the Huon Gulf Following a flood in 1992 the population was relocated to a temporary settlement called Tent Siti City 2 Angau General Hospital Edit Main article ANGAU General Hospital Angau General Hospital is located in the central Lae area next to the old Lae Airfield It is a main referral hospital for the general Morobe Province area as well as the other provinces connected by road link It contains the only Radiotherapy facility in the country and thus serves as the main referral centre for cancer patients Lae Nadzab Airport Edit Main article Lae Nadzab Airport Nadzab Airport is located 56 kilometres 35 mi outside Lae City along the Highlands Highway next to the Markham River Local buses operate to and from the city in addition escorted secured transfers are available for transport into the city From Port Moresby Lae is accessible only by domestic flights Air Niugini Airlines of Papua New Guinea also known as Airlines PNG and Travel Air Mangi lo Ples services the Port Moresby Lae route Other significant locations Edit Lae Yacht Club Sir Ignatius Kilage Stadium Lae Golf Course National Polytechnic Institute of Papua New Guinea Lae City Hotel Hotel Morobe Lae Yacht Club Lae Showgrounds Papindo Shopping Centre at 7th StreetHealthcare EditVisitors must ensure that they have proper health insurance Lae International Hospital is of good developing world standard It is a 19 bed facility with 1 emergency bed It is staffed by 6 doctors one general practitioner an anesthesiologist a surgeon a radiologist and two obstetricians Doctors come from a number of countries nurses are local nationals There is also a public hospital called Angau Memorial Hospital located on Markham Road Travellers to Lae should seek expert medical advice regarding malaria prophylaxis as well as hepatitis A hepatitis B Japanese encephalitis and typhoid vaccinations There was a significant outbreak of cholera based in the Morobe District in 2009 and consideration of vaccination would be prudent 31 Twin town Edit Cairns Queensland Australia since 1984 Dili Timor Leste since 2000See also Edit New Guinea portalInvasion of Salamaua LaeReferences Edit Lae Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d Retrieved 26 February 2014 a b c d e f g h Lae City Council morobepng com Archived from the original on 19 February 2015 Lucas John June 1972 Lae A Town in Transition Oceania 4 42 4 260 275 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4461 1972 tb01181 x JSTOR 40330020 a b c Suzanne Romaine 1992 Language Education and Development Urban and Rural Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea Oxford University Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 19 823966 6 History Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea elcpng org pg Archived from the original on 30 November 2012 Garrett p 3 4 Lohe Johann Konrad Wilhelm New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge Vol VII Wurm S Muhlhausler P Tyron D amp de Gruyter W 1996 Intercultural communication in Atlas of Languages of Intercultural Communication in the Pacific Asia and the Americas Volume 1 to GoogleBooks Website Changes Fall 2014 The Library ucsd edu Archived from the original on 7 January 2014 Kernot C 1999 Valuing Mining Companies A Guide to the Assessment and Evaluation of Assets Performance and Prospects in Business and Economics CRC Press 1 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 10 MUP 1986 Levien Cecil John 1874 1932 2 Lipscomb A McKinnon R amp Murray J 1998 Lonely Planet Mason L amp Hereniko P 1987 In Search of a Home University of the South Pacific Institute of Pacific Studies 982010016X 9789820100169 Battle of the Bismarck Sea 2 4 March 1943 awm gov au USGS Seismic Hazard Map Archived from the original on 28 July 2010 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Earthquake Track Recent Earthquake Near New Guinea Papua New Guinea Retrieved 28 February 2014 a b c 43rd Association of Surveyors PNG Congress Lae Richard Stanaway Laura Wallace Zebedee Sombo Johnson Peter Trevor Palusi Ben Safomea John Nathan 12 15 August 2009 Lae a City caught between two plates 15 years of Deformation Measurements with GPS PDF Focus on Challenges Society Space Surveyors a b Crook Keith A W June 1989 Quaternary uplift rates at a plate boundary Lae urban area Papua New Guinea PDF Tectonophysics 163 1 2 105 118 Bibcode 1989Tectp 163 105C doi 10 1016 0040 1951 89 90121 2 Ripper I D Anton L 1987 Seismic hazard Lae Papua New Guinea Geological Survey Report 95 2 Tidal wave kills thousands BBC News 20 July 1998 Retrieved 2 April 2007 Prostar Sailing Directions 2004 New Guinea Enroute ProStar Publications 1 January 2004 p 164 ISBN 978 1 57785 569 9 Mt Lunaman Lonely Planet Retrieved 9 February 2014 John Laffin 1956 Return to Glory Angus and Robertson p 77 Fodor s Australia New Zealand and the South Pacific D McKay 1989 p 574 ISBN 9780679015987 Crook Keith A W 10 June 1989 Quaternary uplift rates at a plate boundary Lae urban area Papua New Guinea Tectonophysics 163 1 2 105 118 Bibcode 1989Tectp 163 105C doi 10 1016 0040 1951 89 90121 2 Semmler Clement ed 1987 The war dispatches of Kenneth Slessor official Australian correspondent 1940 1944 1 publ ed St Lucia Qld Australia University of Queensland Press p 382 ISBN 978 0702220760 Odd Deal at Lae Sales The Advertiser Adelaide 26 November 1946 p 7 via National Library of Australia World Weather Information Service Lae City World Meteorological Organisation Retrieved 15 December 2015 University of Technology website Papua New Guinea University of Technology Australian foreign affairs and trade Volume 63 Dept of Foreign Affairs and Trade Australia 1992 Tony Wheeler Jon Murray 1993 Papua New Guinea a travel survival kit 5 ed Lonely Planet p 82 ISBN 978 0 86442 190 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Clonal Origins of Vibrio cholerae O1 El Tor Strains Papua New Guinea 2009 2011External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lae Bombing of Lae Captured airfields at Lae Raising Australian flag at Lae Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lae amp oldid 1095668773, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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