Qixing Mountain (Taipei) Explained

25.1708°N 121.5533°W

Qixing Mountain
Other Name:Chihsing Mountain, Cising Mountain
Photo Size:250px
Location:Beitou, Taipei, Taiwan
Elevation M:1120
Range:Datun Volcano Group
Type:Lava dome
Age:Pleistocene
Last Eruption:700,000 BC

Qixing Mountain, also spelled Cising Mountain or Chihsing Mountain, is a mountain in Beitou District, Taipei, Taiwan. It is located within the Tatun Volcanic Group and is the highest mountain in the city, at the rim of Taipei Basin. It is also the highest (dormant) volcano in Taiwan. It is located in the center of Yangmingshan National Park; its main peak is 1120m (3,680feet) above sea level.[1]

It began erupting about 700,000 years ago.[2] There was a crater at the peak but it became seven small peaks due to post-eruption erosion.

The mountain has faults running across the southeast and northwest contours, and has volcanic landforms such as hot springs and fumaroles.

Shamao Mountain is a round volcanic dome that looks like a black gauze cap. As the lava was more viscous when the mountain was formed, it gradually became a tholoid, also known as a cumulo-dome volcano, it is 6430NaN0 above sea level. Shamaoshan and Cigushan (七股山, 8900NaN0) are parasitic volcanoes of Qixingshan.

This mountain is the source of the name for Shichisei District (七星郡), Taihoku Prefecture, Taiwan under Japanese rule. This district included modern day Xizhi, Shilin, Beitou, Nangang, Neihu, Songshan, and Xinyi.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A hike to Taipei City's highest mountain. 29 October 2017. George. Liao. Taiwan News. 30 October 2017.
  2. Web site: Geology . 24 September 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090924090330/http://www.ymsnp.gov.tw/HTML/ENG/01information/inf_a02_main.asp?sn=10 . 9 Jul 2006.