Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Why are there so many Northeasters in Japan?

Why are there so many Northeasters in Japan?

The original picture of the northeastern Japanese is as follows:

1. Students and company employees studying in Japan. Most of these Northeasters came to Japan as international students and stayed in Japan directly after graduation. Taking Liaoning as an example, the early development of Dalian largely depended on the presence of Japanese-funded enterprises, which led to the fact that Dalian's universities not only had Japanese majors, but also had various cooperation projects with Japanese universities.

Dalian International Studies University is one of the most representative universities that export international students to Japan. In addition, there is a well-known Japanese high school in Shenyang, Northeast Yucai School, which has exported a large number of international students from famous schools to Japan for many years, even reported by NHK in Japan.

The school's predecessor was Chiyoda Primary School in the Puppet Manchukuo Period, so there is no need to go into details about its origin with Japan. So many China people from major Japanese companies come from this school.

2, Japanese migrant workers, these people, either for family reasons or simply for living, come to work in Japan. Most of these people are engaged in labor trafficking or service industries that require a lot of labor, such as restaurants, shopping malls and factories. Generally speaking, Japanese is not very good, so I can only do some work of selling my labor.

People with a little better Japanese can do some activities to treat people. In addition, in the early years, many women in difficult areas in Northeast China were introduced to some men in Japan who had difficulty finding wives through intermediaries. Many of them live in rural or remote areas of Japan.

3. Japanese orphans: After Japan's defeat, a large number of Japanese in the Northeast evacuated to Japan, leaving behind many children born in the Northeast, who are often called postwar orphans. Many of these children were temporarily raised by local Japanese. After the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and Japan, some Japanese people came back to look for children lost in the northeast and were taken back to Japan.

natural resource

Japan is poor in natural resources. Except for a very small amount of mineral resources such as coal, natural gas and sulfur, other major raw materials and fuels needed for industrial production must be imported from overseas. However, Japan is rich in forest and fishery resources, and the forest coverage rate accounts for 69% of Japan's land area, making it one of the countries with the highest forest coverage rate in the world. Hokkaido and the Sea of Japan are world-famous fishing grounds, rich in more than 700 kinds of fish.

There are many kinds of plants in Japan. There are about 5560 species of plants in Japan (4720 angiosperms, 40 gymnosperms and 800 ferns). About 1950 species of angiosperms and gymnosperms are native to Japan, accounting for about 35% of all angiosperms and gymnosperms in Japan.

About 1600 species of angiosperms and gymnosperms are native to Japan. Up to 20111,there are more than 60,000 species living in Japan.