Finland Looks Ahead in Mining ? Further Developments of Small Group of Operating Mines Needed to Support Country?s Heavy Industry

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 413 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1946
Abstract
FINLAND'S recent mining history is both dramatic and pitiful in its shifting fortunes, dominated as it has been, by the country's proximity to the border zone of opposing dictatorships and social traditions; Fascism to the south, Communism to the east, and Democracy to the west. After 108 years under Russia's more or less harsh rule, Finland gained its democratic independence during the 1917 revolutionary strife in Russia with the official help of Germany and spontaneous help of other neighbors. The young nation was attacked by Russia in 1939 and again in 1941. It is common knowledge how the Finns fought with everything they had and everything they could get against their overwhelming adversary, and how by force of circumstances they landed in the Axis camp in 1941. Finland has never been known as a mining country in the same way as near-by Sweden, whose abundant iron and copper smelters during long periods so greatly contributed to the nation's welfare. Its largely barren, Archaean-granite geology long seemed forbidding. Some mining was done, to be sure; copper and tin at Pitkaranta near the Russian border, and lead and copper at Orijarvi. But towards the end of the last century the absence of a single producing mine cast a pessimistic shadow of truth over the Finnish poet Runeberg's words, that
Citation
APA:
(1946) Finland Looks Ahead in Mining ? Further Developments of Small Group of Operating Mines Needed to Support Country?s Heavy IndustryMLA: Finland Looks Ahead in Mining ? Further Developments of Small Group of Operating Mines Needed to Support Country?s Heavy Industry. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1946.