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Adipura Award 2004, 2005 and 2006
Wahana Tata Nugraha Award 2004 and 2006
Award of Merit Heritage
BEST PDAM in Indonesia
Green City Award
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Lake Toba |
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Northern
Sumatera, with it's colorfull and ethnically mixed population,
is after Java, the most crowded province in lndonesia. Currently
it has over 11 milion inhabitants and that overshoots Kalimantan
or Nusa Tenggara. Dynamic Batak, Malay, Javanese, Indians,
Acehnese and Chinese created a big variety of modern and traditional
Indonesian culture.
The economy, which has been based on plantation for a long
time, has now been expanded with the big Asahan aluminium
project and multiple service-companies, and belongs to the
strongest in the country. Tourism thrives mainly on the picturesque
beauty of Lake Toba and the Karo highlands, and it just being
overshadowed by Bali and Yogyakarta.
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The province has two important ecological zones - a fertile,
swampy plain in the east with mainly plantations, and a central
vulcanic chain of mountains (Bukit Barisan) which was formed
70 milion years ago by tectonical movements. The western part
does also has a small coastal plain and a chain of low-populated
islands at the coast, of which Nias is the most known.
The proud of North Sumatra is Lake Toba, which was formed
about 75,000 years ago during one of the most powerfull vulcanic
eruptions known to human kind; a tremendous disaster, which
caused a layer of ashes of 600 metres to fall down. About
30,000 years ago, a new series of explosions formed a new
vulcano inside the old one. The hole that was formed by these
explosions nowadays measures 120 by 45 kilometres. To compare:
the famous eruption of Mount St. Helens (1980) left a crater
of only 2 sq.km.
The explosion caused the area around Lake Toba to become an
ecological border. Spiecies like Orang-Utan, other Monkeys
and 17 kinds of Birds can only be found north of this area,
while the Tapit and others including 10 kinds of Birds can
only be found south of the border. Probably a big desolated
area remained after the eruption, in which not many animals
could live, or could cross.
The Batak, now one of the biggest populations in lndonesia,
arrived in the highlands about 3 to 4 thousand years ago from
the Phillippines and Borneo. About probable earlier inhabitants,
nothing is known. Following Toba legends Si Raja Batak was
the mythical ancestor of all Batak people, he descended on
Pusuk Buhit Mount (1981 metres), a vulcano on the western
banks of Lake Toba. Nowadays there are six groups of Batak
living around Lake Toba, who distunguish themselves with their
languages and habits. Their habitational areas border each
other.
View another lake in North Sumatra
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