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Chiaming Lake

Coordinates: 23°17′34.3″N 121°02′03.1″E / 23.292861°N 121.034194°E / 23.292861; 121.034194
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Chiaming Lake
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Chiaming Lake is located in Taiwan
Chiaming Lake
Chiaming Lake
Taiwan
LocationHaiduan, Taitung County, Taiwan
Coordinates23°17′34.3″N 121°02′03.1″E / 23.292861°N 121.034194°E / 23.292861; 121.034194
TypeLake
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) is a lake in Haiduan Township, Taitung County, Taiwan.[1] It is the second highest lake area in Taiwan.[2]

Name

In Bunun language, Chiaming Lake is called "cidanumas 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 forest authority closed the mountain area for maintenance and restoration works on 10 December 2014 until 31 March 2015. 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. It is surrounded by emerald green forest plantation and wildlife.[4]

Features

The area surrounds the lake has lodges and hiking trail with a length of 13 km.

Tourism

The lake and surrounding areas attracts more than 10,000 visitors every year for visit.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Chiaming Lake". Taitung, Taiwan's Treasure. Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
  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. ^ Spenser, David (10 November 2017). "Top 10 alternative places to visit on Taiwan's east coast". Taiwan News. Retrieved 11 November 2017.