Keelung Islet

Keelung Islet
Location of Keelung Islet
Keelung Islet
Native name: 基隆嶼
Geography
Location Zhongzheng, Keelung, Taiwan
Area 23.91 ha (59.1 acres)
Length 910 m (2,990 ft)
Width 410 m (1,350 ft)
Highest elevation 182 m (597 ft)

Keelung Islet (Chinese: 基隆嶼; pinyin: Jīlóngyǔ; Wade–Giles: Chi-lung Yü) is a small island in Zhongzheng District, Keelung, Taiwan and 4.9 km (3.0 mi) away from the Port of Keelung. It has an area of 23.91 ha (59.08 acres). It is 910 m (2,986 ft) in length, and 410 m (1,345 ft) in width including the artificial harbor, the highest point is 182 m (597 ft) above sea level.[1]

History

In ancient times, the island was seen as a sacred place by locals. It was rumoured that a female ghost named Shih-Yun lived there, to mourn over her husband who died in a shipwreck hundreds of years ago.

In the modern day, the islet is primarily used as a military training base. Since 2001, it has been opened for tourists. Ferry services to the island operate daily from the port of Keelung. There is a small port and a walkway on the island. The island is also popular with the local fishing industry, because of the quantity of fish it attracts in its surrounding sea.

In 2015, the islet was closed to the public for trash cleanup works. It will be reopened again in August 2018.[2]

Geography

The island is volcanic, part of the Chilung Volcano Group. It dates from the Pleistocene period. The eruption was explosive tholeiitic andesite and dacite. The main mineral is calcium rich plagioclase. The magma source is the western extremity of the Ryukyu Volcanic Arc formed when the subducting Philippine Sea Plate was compressed below the edge of the Eurasian Plate at about 20 to 30 km deep. The magma was contaminated with continental crust material. Geochemistry of the rock shows that iron, aluminium, titanium, potassium, rubidium and strontium are enriched, but sodium, magnesium and nickel are impoverished.[3]

See also

References

  1. "Keelung Islet". Taiwan, the Heart of Asia. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  2. Teng, Pei-ju (12 May 2018). "1.5-ton garbage removed from Taiwan's Keelung Islet in two hours". Taiwan News. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  3. Zhang Jinhai and He Lishi (2002). "Geology of Taiwan Province". Geology of China. Geological Publishing House. ISBN 7-116-02268-6.

Coordinates: 25°11′32″N 121°47′08″E / 25.19222°N 121.78556°E / 25.19222; 121.78556


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