A riddle: what is one of the smallest, most isolated
countries in the world but, at the same time, is one of the largest and very near-by
countries? In fact, it spreads out almost everywhere.
Another clue: It’s small because it’s an eight square
mile dot in the Pacific Ocean. It’s isolated because it’s not close to anything
except the equator.
Another clue: It’s large because the phosphate rock
mined there has been shipped all over the world as fertilizers, animal feed
supplements, food preservatives,
baking flour, pharmaceuticals, anticorrosion agents, cosmetics, fungicides,
insecticides, detergents, ceramics, water treatments and metallurgy additives.
There’s a chance that we walk on part of this country every day.
Another riddle: What
country was one of the wealthiest per capita a few years ago, but now is among
the poorest? They had, then lost, it all.
Judging from the feeder
albums I’ve plundered to build my stamp collection, Nauru’s stamps have been
spread out almost as widely as their phosphate rock. Mint examples, as most of
mine are, cost me less than a comparable amount of phosphate; good used Nauru
stamps would likely cost considerably more than phosphate, but I don’t have
many of those.
Census: 22 in BB spaces, one tip-in, eleven on the supplement page.
This little oval shaped phosphate rock encrusted coral atoll is only 8 square miles in area, and is located in the South Pacific Ocean on the equator south of the Marshall Islands. It is surrounded by a coral reef, so only small boats may access the island.
Quite an interesting country, 8 square miles and roughly 11,000 people in a very isolated location with a very challenged economy following the exhaustion of the phosphate deposits on which much of its history depended. The Wikipedia articule indicates they are definitely trying to survive.
ReplyDeleteNauru philately survives, too.
ReplyDelete