You know these industrial areas identical to Silicon Valley - yet it should not be associated to IT attention (or weave industry). I’d cite any iron as well as Stell industrial area - though anything else would do too. PLease assistance me! we need to have the project!
Industrial area may be identical to we know any city in that after the stting up of the sold sort of industry, alternative industries have grown of identical sorts or of those that addition them.
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Yes,the answer lies in your text book!
south america especially brazil has great industrial area(including mining)… brazil produces the best steel….
Europe
Both Newcastle-Upon_Tyne in England and Newcastle in NSW Australia are famous for their coal mining and the industries which have grown from it. Iron, steel, plastics, chemicals, electricity. Woolongong too, in Aust has been built from the production of steel. Migrants shipped in to work the mills and factories, cheap housing, schooling aimed at raising the next generation of labour( or keeping house for the workers), local shops & businesses dependent upon the Big Bosses pleasure, trade unions.
The Rhur Valley in Germany is, I think, another example.
And, or course, South Africa has some long established industrial areas.
Manchester in England has long been famous for its textiles.
Japan, too, has some pretty serious industries…cars for a start.
Most heavy industry is dependent upon cheap and plentiful energy (like coal, oil), plentiful water, easy access to resources (iron ore in he case of steel) and cheap reliable freight system (a good rail-link to a harbour helps) to transport the manufactured goods to be sent off to wherever their buyer wants plus a reasonably cheap workforce.