Langkawi Geopark is Malaysia's first geopark and is
located in the far northwestern corner of peninsular Malaysia. Located
in northern State of Kedah, it is unique in the sense that it was formed
on 99 islands that together made up the legendary Langkawi Archipelago.
The total land area of Langkawi Geopark is about 478km2.
It
is accessible by sea from Kuala Perlis , Kuala Kedah and Penang jetties
or by air from Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Singapore and Bangkok.
Langkawi
has been dubbed as the birthplace or the fetus land of the region. The
various natural landscapes of Langkawi reflects the island's
geodiversity and its complex geological history. It has the best-exposed
and most complete Palaeozoic sedimentary sequence in Malaysia beginning
from Cambrian to the Permian period. Later during the Mesozoic, the
islands underwent a major tectonic event that resulted in the
emplacement of its numerous granitic igneous bodies.
This incredible power generated by nature from the
deep mantle beneath the earth has driven up huge blocks of older rocks
and somehow placed them above a very much younger terrain.
In
Langkawi geological history, much of its geological development was
somewhat linked to what had happened in the old supercontinent Pangea
and southern hemispheric Gondwanaland since more than 550 million years
ago. It started in the deposition of Machinchang sandstone in a
lacustrine environment during much of the Cambrian time, followed by the
submergence of the land during Late Cambrian time (--500m.y.) which
allowed the invasion of shallow marine fauna into the proto-Langkawi
sea. The continuous subsidence of the sea floor resulted in the
formation of thick limestone of Setul Formation during the Ordovician.
At the end of Ordovician time (--440m.y.), the sea became too deep to
eventually stop the limestone deposition temporarily.
Setul
limestone continued to develop during Silurian until the Middle
Devonian (-370m.y.), followed by the deposition of sandstone and
mudstone which sometimes are related to the rafted ice due to the global
melting of Gondwana ice cap.
The dropstone
bearing black sandstone and mudstone of Singa Formation is succeeded by
the limestone of Chuping Formation during the Early Permian (-280m.y.)
before the sea was slowly brought up by a complicated tectonic process.
The
Chuping limestone is believed to have stopped depositing before the end
of Permian (-245m.y.) by this tectonic event that among others brought
up a large block of earth crust in the eastern part of Langkawi
overlapping the much younger block in the west. The tectonic event ended
up with the emplacement of granite beneath the Langkawi crust at the
end of Triassic (-220m.y.).
What we have in
Langkawi today is a combined result of these various processes and the
prolonged weathering process that took place ever since the Langkawi
land was brought to the surface around 220 million years ago. As a
result, we have a beautiful mountainous range of Machinchang sandstone
at the northwestern corner of Langkawi Island, the conical Gunung Raya
granite at the center and a rugged karst terrain of Setul Limestone in
the eastern part of Langkawi.
In the southwest of
Langkawi islands, the Singa formation dominated while the Chu ping
Limestone dominates the western part of Dayang Bunting Island. Some of
the landscapes are truly outstanding, particularly those of the
Machinchang and the karstic limestone in the eastern part of Langkawi.
http://www.langkawigeopark.com.my/v2/
http://www.langkawigeopark.com.my/v2/
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