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The Shipwreck Of Panaitan
Written by Adhi Rachmat Hariyadi   

SumurIt is Friday at noon; the team has already arrived in Sumur, a sleepy fishermen town on the West coast of Banten. KM Samudra and her crew are ready to receive the group on board. A small motorized skiff shuttles between the shore and the boat loaded with logistics, equipments, and people. A team consisting of marine biologists, cameramen, and photographers is set up for this particular survey. The water around Panaitan Island is recently invested with scavengers and treasure hunters looking for valuable cargo from a long sunken vessel in the northwestem reefs of the island.

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Cegog - a forgotten village
Written by Adhi Rachmat Hariyadi   

MapOn a densely populated and highly modernized island of Java, some people are still facing difficult and hard life. With small and no steady income to sustain their economy, people in Kampong Cegog must work very hard to make the ends meet. Kampong Cegog is located in the village of Rancapinang; sub-district Sumur, regency of Pandeglang, Banten. Nestled in a hilly area, it is the last settlement before entering the south part of Ujung Kulon National Park, a world heritage site, sanctuary of the last Javan rhinoceros.

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Tara Bandu in East Timor
Written by Narve Rio and Demetrio de Carvalho   

Tara Bandu poleThe environment of East Timor is highly diverse; in terms of geology, topography, climate, as well as terrestrial and aquatic flora and fauna. Obviously man has affected the East Timor environment, but it is equally true that most resource uses are curtailed by and adapted to the island's natural conditions. The differences in practises and livelihoods found throughout East Timor reflect these varying natural conditions in highly specialised systems for resource use.

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Malang Hash House Harriers II
Written by Juned Choudhury   

East Java landscape not far from Batu.Rail Jerker's Diary.
MALANG HASH HOUSE HARRIERS II, East Java, Indonesia. Run # 740 Friday, 6 May 2005.
Hares: "Draimulen"; his wife "Mentek"; and her sister "Ayam Mini".

Splendid Inn Hotel is the "Hash Head Quarters & Correspondence" of Malang Hash House Harriers II, a mixed hash, which runs every Friday, with HHH (Happy Hash Hours) at the Inn on Wednesday evenings.

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Asmat identity
Written by The Library of Congress   

The Asmat region on East Irian Jaya is a huge area of mangroves and rivers with huge tides, and one of the few unexplored regions of the world.The approximately 65,000 Asmat people of the south-central alluvial swamps of Irian Jaya Province are descended from a Papuan racial stock. They live in villages with populations that vary from 35 to 2,000. Until the 1950s, when greater numbers of outsiders arrived, warfare, headhunting, and cannibalism were constant features of their social life. Their houses were built along the bends of rivers so that an enemy attack could be seen in advance.

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The North Sumatra Triangle
Written by Juned Choudhury   

A Batak house is built on stilts, made of wood (without nails) and roofed with sugar palm fibre, or unfortunately today more often rusting corrugated iron. The style vary from region to region, but the basics are the same. Pulau Samosir, Lake Toba.The North Sumatra Triangle -- a paradise for budget tourists. "Unity in Diversity" is the national motto of Indonesia. There are over 300 tribal-ethnic groups living on 6,000 islands. The remaining 11,000 islands are uninhabited. The larger islands are Java, Sumatra, Irian Jaya and Kalimantan. Kalimantan comprises two-thirds of the island of Borneo, the other one-third being East Malaysia (Sarawak and Sabah) and the Sultanate of Brunei.

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North Maluku
Written by bjorn   

Small bamboo shelters on a beach close to Halmahera (from helicopter).Halmahera is the largest island in the Maluku archipelago. Because of the mountainous landscape it is however the most sparsely populated, considering the size. Population is about 130.000, and there are no large cities here. Only on the northern peninsula there are some infrastructure and villages of any significance, there are some villages on the southern peninsula as well. The population are mainly Muslim with a mix of ethnic backgrounds; Arabs, Indians, Portuguese, Dutch and Malay.

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Bromo-Tengger national park
Written by bjorn   

Bromo is a smoking cone inside the huge, older crater Tengger. Gunung Batok to the right of Bromo. The path to the volcano can bee seen on the plain, in the end of this path there is a Hindu temple.Bromo-Tengger national park is located on East Java, about three hours by car from Surabaya. Tengger is a huge, old caldera with the Bromo volcano inside. The smoking cone of Bromo raises from the plain of this 10 km wide caldera, but is not the highest mountain inside. Side by side with Bromo are also other mountains like Gunung Batok (2.440m) and Gunung Kursi (2.581m). Bromo (2.392m) and the nearby Semeru volcano, the highest mountain on Java (3.676m), have during the two previous centuries had at least 100 eruptions.

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Carstensz 2002/2003
Written by World Wide Vikings   

The summit ridge, Gisle and Erik stopped their ascent here. © 2002 World Wide VikingsJoin the Norwegian guys in World Wide Vikings on an expedition to Puncak Jaya, the highest peak in Indonesia, also known as Carstensz Pyramid. The expedition took place in December 2002 / January 2003. Carstensz Pyramid is the lowest peak of the Seven Summits (the highest mountains on seven continents), but not necessarily the easiest to climb. The mountain is located in the Indonesian part of New Guinea, and is not easily accessible.

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The Metu people of West Timor
Written by Narve Rio   

Nenas woman and horse.A couple of years ago West Timor used to see tourists in the range of 3 - 4.000 foreigners a year. Many of these visited the mountainous region of the Gunung Mutis protection forest. Particularly bird watchers showed a great interest to the area. In 2001 tourism dropped to less than a hundred visitors yearly due to the proximity to the East Timor border, the refugee situation and general instability in the area, and still in 2003 the difficult situation persists.

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Go to Bukit Lawang
Written by John Tarver Bailey   

Bukit Lawang guesthouseI just came from four days at BUKIT LAWANG near GUNUNG LEUSER NP in Sumatra...Such an amazing place and it's really tragic the way that the town has yet to recover from the 2003 flood. It needs only one thing - and that's tourists. Pre Nov.2003 Bukit Lawang was an absolute oasis for travelers to northern Sumatra and we made up a HUGE part of the local economy.

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