Journal article

Qualitative modelling of gold mine impacts on Lihir Island's socioeconomic system and reef-edge fish community

JM Dambacher, DT Brewer, DM Dennis, M Macintyre, S Foale

Environmental Science and Technology | Published : 2007

Abstract

Inhabitants of Lihir Island, Papua New Guinea, have traditionally relied on reef fishing and rotational farming of slash-burn forest plots for a subsistence diet. However, a new gold mine has introduced a cash economy to the island's socioeconomic system and impacted the fringing coral reef through sedimentation from the near-shore dumping of mine wastes. Studies of the Lihirian people have documented changes in population size, local customs, health, education, and land use; studies of the reef have documented impacts to fish populations in mine affected sites. Indirect effects from these impacts are complex and indecipherable when viewed only from isolated studies. Here, we use qualitative..

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University of Melbourne Researchers