Needle Hill

Coordinates: 22°23′14″N 114°09′38″E / 22.387089°N 114.160486°E / 22.387089; 114.160486
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Needle Hill, Hong Kong
針山
Stage 7 of the MacLehose Trail near the summit of Needle Hill in December 2006
Highest point
Elevation532 m (1,745 ft)
Hong Kong Principal Datum Edit this on Wikidata
Coordinates22°23′14″N 114°09′38″E / 22.387089°N 114.160486°E / 22.387089; 114.160486
Geography
Needle Hill, Hong Kong is located in Hong Kong
Needle Hill, Hong Kong
Needle Hill, Hong Kong
Location of Needle Hill in Hong Kong
Location Hong Kong

Needle Hill or Cham Shan (Chinese: 針山) is a mountain in New Territories, Hong Kong. It has an altitude of 532 m.[1] This is a part of a popular hiking route including Grassy Hill and Tai Mo Shan. The mountain got its name due to the resemblance of a needle by its peak.

Needle Hill
Hanyu Pinyin
Zhēn Shān
Hakka
RomanizationZem1 San1
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationjām sāan
JyutpingZam1 Saan1
Needle Hill viewed from the Shing Mun Reservoir in December 2010 (image by Vox Solis)

Geography

At around 400 above sea level, it forms a needle-like shape at its peak. The granitic rocks that form this hill is part of a granitic ridge that starts at the Tolo Channel and ends in Kwai Chung.[2]

Needle Hill is located within Shing Mun Country Park.[3] Stage 7 of the MacLehose Trail includes the summit of Needle Hill.[4] The Shing Mun Tunnels pass through the base of Needle Hill. The Lower Shing Mun River can also be found at the base of the hill.

Geology

A Geological Map showing the distribution of the types of rocks in Hong Kong. Needle Hill is in the area which shows it consists of mostly granitic rocks.
A Hong Kong Geological Map showing the distribution of the types of rocks there. Needle Hill is in red, which shows it consists of mostly granitic rocks.

Needle Hill is mainly composed of Granite. Wolframite, Molybdenite and Quartz ores can be found at the base of the hill.[2]

History

Wolframite, a tungsten ore, was discovered at Needle Hill in 1935. It was mined there from 1938 to 1967.[5][6] The mines used to obtain Wolframite ores are now abandoned.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Lands Department (February 2014), Hong Kong Geographic Data (PDF), retrieved 2014-09-12
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ AFCD: Shing Mun Country Park
  4. ^ AFCD: MacLehose Trail Section 7: Shing Mun to Lead Mine Pass
  5. ^ CEDD: Economic Geology - Metalliferous minerals Archived 2013-12-19 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Roberts, KJ; Strange, PJ (September 1991). "The geology and exploitation of the Needle Hill wolframite deposit" (PDF). Geological Society of Hong Kong Newsletter. Vol. 9, no. 3. Hong Kong. pp. 29–40.

External links

22°23′14″N 114°09′38″E / 22.387089°N 114.160486°E / 22.387089; 114.160486