Tirap Gaon, Ledo
Tirap Gaon
Teerap | |
---|---|
Rural | |
Tirap Colliery | |
Nickname: Colliery | |
Coordinates: 27°19′0″N 95°49′0″E / 27.31667°N 95.81667°E | |
Country | India |
State | Assam |
District | Tinsukia |
Named for | Coal Colliery namely Tirap Colliery under Ledo Coal Division |
Government | |
• Type | Panchayat Raj under State Government |
• Body | Gaon Panchayat |
Elevation | 333 m (1,093 ft) |
Population (2011) | |
• Total | 3,487 |
Languages | |
• Official | Assamese |
Time zone | UTC+5:30 (IST) |
PIN | 786182 |
ISO 3166 code | IN-AS |
Vehicle registration | AS |
Coastline | 0 kilometres (0 mi) |
Tirap Gaon, Ledo also known as Tirap Colliery,[1] is a small village in Margherita Tehsil in Tinsukia District of north-eastern state Assam, India. It is located around 3 km away from nearest town Ledo, 11 km away from sub-divisional town Margherita and 60 km away from district headquarter Tinsukia. Tirap Gaon is connected to Makum by National Highway 38 (old numbering).
The Indian census counts Tirap Gaon as two villages: No.1 and No.2.[2]
This place is known for opencast coal mining since 1983[3] under North Eastern Coalfields, a unit of Coal India Limited.[4] In 2018–2019, an international team of researchers discovered fossil impressions of two previously unknown species of bamboo (Bambusiculmus tirapensis and Bambusiculmus makumensis) in the Tirap coalmine. These fossils date back to about 25 million years ago, falling in the late Oligocene period. This discovery strengthened the theory that bamboo came to Asia from India and not from Europe. It also challenged the previous hypothesis that Asian bamboo spread from the Yunnan region of China to India.[5]
Nearest town and villages
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Map of Tirap Colliery".
- ^ District Census Handbook: Tinsukia District (PDF). Directorate of Census Operations, Assam. 2011. p. 552. Retrieved 16 November 2018.
- ^ "Welcome to North Eastern Coalfields, Margherita, Assam".
- ^ "Welcome to NEC under Coal India Limited".
- ^ Pacha, Aswathi (5 October 2019). "India is home to Asia's oldest bamboo". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
External links
[edit]- M.D.K. Girls’ College, Dibrugarh made an educational tour to Tirap Colliery
- NEC Coal India Limited flayed for dismissing 340 security guards
- Students' protest hits in Ledo Tirap coal field