Chiaming Lake

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Chiaming Lake
Jiaming lake.jpg
Chiaming Lake is located in Taitung County
Chiaming Lake
Chiaming Lake
LocationHaiduan, Taitung County, Taiwan
Coordinates23°17′34.3″N 121°02′03.1″E / 23.292861°N 121.034194°E / 23.292861; 121.034194Coordinates: 23°17′34.3″N 121°02′03.1″E / 23.292861°N 121.034194°E / 23.292861; 121.034194
Typelake
Native name嘉明湖  (Chinese)
Max. length120 meters (390 ft)
Max. width80 meters (260 ft)
Surface elevation3,310 meters (10,860 ft)

The Chiaming Lake (Chinese: 嘉明湖; pinyin: Jiāmíng Hú; BununCidanuman Buan (mirror of the moon)) is a lake in Haiduan Township, Taitung County, Taiwan. It is the second highest lake area in Taiwan.

Name[]

In Bunun language, Chiaming Lake is called "cidanuman buan", meaning "Mirror of the moon"; in Taiwan, it is traditionally referred as "Angel's teardrop" or, due to its deep blue color, "God's lost sapphire".

History[]

The lake was formed by glacial movement during the ice age.[1] The forest authority closed the mountain area for maintenance and restoration works on 10 December 2014 until 31 March 2015.[2] On 5 January 2018, the lake was closed for visitors and will be opened again on 1 April 2018 to allow the natural vegetation restoration of the area around the lake.[3]

Geography[]

This oval-shaped lake is located along the Southern Cross-Island Highway. The lake surface is 120 meters long and 80 meters wide at an elevation of 3,310 meters.[4] It is surrounded by emerald green forest plantation and wildlife.[5] The area surrounds the lake has lodges and hiking trail with a length of 13 km.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Jiaming Lake". Taiwan Adventures. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
  2. ^ Lu, Tyson; Wu, Lilian (4 December 2014). "Mountain trail to popular spot Lake Jiaming to close for maintenance". Focus Taiwan. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  3. ^ "Lake Jiaming in eastern Taiwan to be off limits to hikers for 3 months starting Jan 5". Taiwan News. 3 January 2018. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  4. ^ "Chiaming Lake". Taitung, Taiwan's Treasure. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
  5. ^ Spenser, David (10 November 2017). "Top 10 alternative places to visit on Taiwan's east coast". Taiwan News. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
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