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Encyclopedia > Southern Highlands (Papua New Guinea)
Location of Southern Highlands Province in Papua New Guinea
Location of Southern Highlands Province in Papua New Guinea

Southern Highlands is a province in Papua New Guinea. Its provincial capital is the town of Mendi. According to Papua New Guinea's national 2000 census, the total population of Southern Highlands is 546,265 spread across 23,800 square kilometers (9,189 square miles), which makes it the most highly populated province in the country. Image File history File links Papua_new_guinea_southern_highlands_province. ... Image File history File links Papua_new_guinea_southern_highlands_province. ... Mendi, Papua New Guinea, is the provincial capital of the Southern Highlands Province, and is also the name of one of the seven districts of that province. ...


The province is divided into roughly four distinct Geographic regions


1. The West: Which includes the districts of Tari, Koroba, Kopiago and Komo - the home of the Huli, Guna, and Hewa peoples. Huli Wigman The Huli are an Indigenous people that live in the Southern Highlands of Papua New Guinea. ... The Sanskrit word guna (guṇa) has the basic meaning of string or a single thread or strand of a cord or twine. In more abstract uses, it may mean a subdivision, species, kind, and generally quality. // In Classical literature In Classical literature (e. ...


2. The Centre: Which includes the districts of Margaraima, Nipa, Mendi and the Lai Valley, and is the home of the speakers of dialects of the Anggal Heneng language.


3. The East: Which includes the districts of Kagua, Ialibu, Pangia and Erave, and is the home of the speakers of the Imbongu, Kewa, and Wiru languages.


4. The Lowlands: which stretch across the southern part of the Southern Highlands province from the Vocanic Peaks of Mount Bosavi to include the Oilfields of Lake Kutubu, and includes the language groups of Biami (shared with Western Province) Foe, and Fasu.


Sources/Further Reading

  • Hanson, L.W., Allen, B.J., Bourke, R.M. and McCarthy, T.J. (2001). Papua New Guinea Rural Development Handbook. Land Management Group, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University, Canberra. Available as a 30 Megabyte PDF.


 
Provinces of Papua New Guinea
Central | Eastern Highlands | East New Britain | East Sepik | Enga | Gulf | Madang | Manus | Milne Bay | Morobe | New Ireland | North Solomons (Bougainville) | Oro (Northern) | Sandaun (West Sepik) | Simbu (Chimbu) | Southern Highlands | Western | Western Highlands | West New Britain | National Capital District

  Results from FactBites:
 
Papua New Guinea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (5562 words)
The Independent State of Papua New Guinea (informally, Papua New Guinea or PNG) is a country in Oceania, occupying the eastern half of the island of New Guinea and numerous offshore islands (the Indonesian province of Papua (Indonesian province) occupies the western half of New Guinea).
Papua was administered under the Papua Act until it was invaded by the Japanese in 1941, and civil administration suspended.
New Guinea is part of the humid tropics, and many Indomalayan rainforest plants spread across the narrow straits from Asia, mixing together with the old Australian and Antarctic floras.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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