Mir diamond mine
0 sources
Mir diamond mine
Summary
Mir diamond mine is a diamond mine[1]. It draws 458 Wikipedia views per month (diamond_mine category, ranking #6 of 30).[2]
Key Facts
- Mir diamond mine is located in Sakha[3].
- Mir diamond mine is located in Mirninsky District[4].
- Mir diamond mine is located in Mirny[5].
- Mir diamond mine is in the country of Russia[6].
- Mir diamond mine is in the country of Soviet Union[7].
- Mir diamond mine is on the continent of Asia[8].
- Mir diamond mine's instance of is recorded as diamond mine[9].
- Mir diamond mine is operated by ALROSA[10].
- Mir diamond mine's Commons category is recorded as Mir mine[11].
- 1957 marks the founding of Mir diamond mine[12].
- Mir diamond mine's time of discovery or invention is recorded as June 13, 1955[13].
- Mir diamond mine was dissolved in 2017[14].
- Mir diamond mine's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 62.52583333333333, 'lon': 113.98416666666667}[15].
- Mir diamond mine's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Siberia[16].
- Mir diamond mine's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Eurasian Plate[17].
- Mir diamond mine's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Yakut diamondiferous province[18].
- Mir diamond mine's product or material produced is recorded as diamond[19].
Body
Geography
Country listings include Russia[6], a sovereign state[20], in Russia[21], founded in 1991[22] and Soviet Union[7], a federal republic[23], in Soviet Union[24], founded in 1922[25]. Located in include Sakha[3], a republic of Russia[26], in Russia[27], founded in 1990[28]; Mirninsky District[4], a municipal district[29], in Russia[30], founded in 1965[31]; and Mirny[5], an administrative divisions of Russia[32], in Russia[33], founded in 1955[34]. Mir diamond mine is on the continent of Asia[8].
Designation and Status
Mir diamond mine's instance of is recorded as diamond mine[9].
History and Context
1957 marks the founding of Mir diamond mine[12].
Why It Matters
Mir diamond mine draws 458 Wikipedia views per month (diamond_mine category, ranking #6 of 30).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] It is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]