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WHICH IS WHlCH?—There is a marked resemblance between Mount Egmont, in Taranaki, and the far-famed Fujiyama in Japan. The two photographs above indicate this clearly. The scene with the border of trees is the Japanese one. Both Fujiyama and Egmont rise sheer from plains; both are in close proximity to water. The two mountains lie almost in the same position north and south of the equator. Photographs by T. H. Whetton, Wanganui.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19290706.2.175.1

Bibliographic details

Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 708, 6 July 1929, Page 3

Word Count
72

WHICH IS WHICH?—There is a marked resemblance between Mount Egmont, in Taranaki, and the far-famed Fujiyama in Japan. The two photographs above indicate this clearly. The scene with the border of trees is the Japanese one. Both Fujiyama and Egmont rise sheer from plains; both are in close proximity to water. The two mountains lie almost in the same position north and south of the equator. Photographs by T. H. Whetton, Wanganui. Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 708, 6 July 1929, Page 3

WHICH IS WHICH?—There is a marked resemblance between Mount Egmont, in Taranaki, and the far-famed Fujiyama in Japan. The two photographs above indicate this clearly. The scene with the border of trees is the Japanese one. Both Fujiyama and Egmont rise sheer from plains; both are in close proximity to water. The two mountains lie almost in the same position north and south of the equator. Photographs by T. H. Whetton, Wanganui. Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 708, 6 July 1929, Page 3

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