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On 1 July 2002 Brumbles Ltd Commenced an Operation to Extract

question 48

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On 1 July 2002 Brumbles Ltd commenced an operation to extract iron ore from two sites believed to have potential in Northern Australia.During the financial period ended 30 June 2003 the following costs were incurreD. On 1 July 2002 Brumbles Ltd commenced an operation to extract iron ore from two sites believed to have potential in Northern Australia.During the financial period ended 30 June 2003 the following costs were incurreD.   The Eastern site is found not to be economically viable and is abandoned in the second half of 2003.Development costs of $10 million are incurred at the Western site.The reserves at this site are estimated to be 90,000 tonnes.The market price is currently $700 per tonne.In the financial year ended 30 June 2004,10,000 tonnes are extracted with associated production costs of $1 million and 8,000 tonnes are sold at the market price.There are no effective limits on the time over which Brumbles Ltd may extract the ore.What are the journal entries to record the relevant transactions and events for 2003 and 2004 using the method required by AASB 1022 (round to the nearest $10,000) ? A)    B)    C)    D)    E)  None of the given answers. The Eastern site is found not to be economically viable and is abandoned in the second half of 2003.Development costs of $10 million are incurred at the Western site.The reserves at this site are estimated to be 90,000 tonnes.The market price is currently $700 per tonne.In the financial year ended 30 June 2004,10,000 tonnes are extracted with associated production costs of $1 million and 8,000 tonnes are sold at the market price.There are no effective limits on the time over which Brumbles Ltd may extract the ore.What are the journal entries to record the relevant transactions and events for 2003 and 2004 using the method required by AASB 1022 (round to the nearest $10,000) ?


Definitions:

Motor Control Circuits

Electrical circuits designed to control the start, stop, speed, and direction of an electric motor.

Motor Starter

A device that controls the use of electrical power to equipment, specifically to an electric motor, by means of protection and control circuitry.

No-voltage Drop-out

A safety feature in electrical devices that causes them to automatically switch off in the event of a voltage reduction or loss, preventing damage or unsafe conditions.

Two-wire Control

A simplified control circuit configuration that uses two wires for operation, commonly applied in direct ON/OFF control scenarios.

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