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Mount Alab

Coordinates: 5°49′N 116°22′E / 5.817°N 116.367°E / 5.817; 116.367
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(Redirected from Gunung Alab)

Mount Alab
Mount Alab is located in Malaysia
Mount Alab
Mount Alab
Location in Malaysia
Highest point
Elevation1,951 m (6,401 ft)
ListingRibu
Coordinates5°49′N 116°22′E / 5.817°N 116.367°E / 5.817; 116.367
Naming
Native name
Geography
LocationPenampang-Tambunan border, West Coast/Interior divisional boundary, Sabah
Parent rangeCrocker Mountains

Mount Alab (Malay: Gunung Alab, Dusun: Nulu Alab) is a mountain located at the border of the West Coast as well as the Interior divisions of Sabah, Malaysia. The mountain is located approximately 30 km (19 mi) from Sabah's capital of Kota Kinabalu, where it can be highly visible from the city on a clear sky and easily recognisable with the presence of telecommunications tower near its peak, approximately at 5°49′47″N 116°20′30″E / 5.82972°N 116.34167°E / 5.82972; 116.34167.[1] With a height of 1,951 metres (6,401 ft),[1][2] it is the highest mountain within the Crocker Range in Sabah outside the protected park area and lies to the south of the highest peak on Borneo island, the Mount Kinabalu.[3][4]

Geology

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The rock of the mountain consists of Late Eocene-Lower Miocene sedimentary rocks from Crocker Formation which is made of sandstone, shale and interlayered sandstone-siltstone-shale unit.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Class VI Virgin Jungle Reserve (VJR) [Infrastructure]". Government of Sabah. 2 April 2005. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
  2. ^ a b Majeed M. Faisal; Edward Voo Lok Zan; Sanudin Tahir; Baba Musta (1999). "Geomorphology of Gunung Alab, Tambunan and Keningau" (PDF). Borneo Science: 19 [3/20]. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 July 2019 – via Universiti Malaysia Sabah.
  3. ^ "Crocker Range [Data Zone MY020]". BirdLife International. 2003. Retrieved 5 July 2019. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ "Introduction to Crocker Range Park". Sabah Parks. Retrieved 5 July 2019. The Park lies within 8 districts with elevation ranging between 100m to 2050m at the peak of Mt. Alab.