Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian: Taiwan’s Most Ancient Sedimentary Rock
Sherry Shang / photos courtesy of Shei-Pa National Park / tr. by Chris Nelson
December 2014
Majestic and imposing, Mt. Dabajian is echoed by Mt. Xiaobajian, which sits 700 meters away. Since it’s quite easy to reach and boasts superb vistas and wide-open spaces, this area has long been a popular choice for hikers. And their distinctive geology makes these mountains all the more magnificent.
Featuring Taiwan’s oldest, hardest sedimentary rock, prominent, angular peaks, and steep cliffs on all sides, these imposing mountains were voted tenth among Taiwan’s Top Ten Landscapes.
Straddling the border of Jianshi Township in Hsinchu County and Tai’an Township in Miaoli County, 3,492-meter-high Mt. Dabajian and 3,418-meter-high Mt. Xiaobajian are located in the central section of the Xueshan Range, and lie within Shei-Pa National Park.
Mt. Dabajian’s most distinctive feature is the hard sandstone pyramid that forms its peak. Fossils of ancient Foraminifera plankton found in this area prove that the geological forms here are Taiwan’s oldest sedimentary rock, with the lower layers dating back 40–50 million years. And Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian have the same geological makeup and origins.
Hard sandstone formed by tens of millions of years of sedimentation is responsible for Mt. Dabajian’s distinctive appearance.
Just imagine an ancient seabed 40–50 million years ago, layered with rock and grit as well as now-extinct marine organisms that would one day be fossilized. Over a period of more than 10 million years, strata of sandstone and shale piled up like a layer cake. Then, starting around 4 million years ago, during the orogeny of the Xueshan Range, it was slowly lifted upward to form some of Taiwan’s most magnificent peaks.
In the view of geologists, Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian are valuable in terms of academic research, natural beauty, and education. This is indeed a national-class geological landscape.
Explains Chen Wen-shan, professor of geosciences at National Taiwan University, “After tens of millions of years, the rock of Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian still retains its original appearance, not having been strongly metamorphosed, and fossils of marine organisms are also visible. So the upper strata of these two mountains and the Xueshan Range can be deemed Taiwan’s most ancient sedimentary rock.”
Looking at Mt. Dabajian from afar, we see horizontal strata formed by the accretion of layer upon layer of sandstone and shale. The upper layers of shale were gradually eroded, leaving hard Szeleng sandstone at the summit. This rock doesn’t fold or weather easily, so it sticks out along the ridgeline, creating the two prominent peaks of Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian.
But long ago, Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian were not the isolated mountaintops we see today, which resemble two brothers facing each other. Says Chen, “From the stratigraphic structure of the mountain range, we know that Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian originally belonged to the same stratum and were connected. But the ground between the two mountains eroded away, leaving the harder peak structures standing tall, thereby forming the terrain we see today.”
Between uplift and erosionEven more incredibly, tens of millions of years ago, what is now Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian was covered with a layer of rock up to 10 kilometers thick, which was gradually worn away by relentless uplifting and erosion.
But even amid the short existence of the human species, this mountain scene may be fleeting. “It’s estimated that after just a few thousand more years of weathering, the awe-inspiring mountaintops of Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian will also be worn away to nothing!” says Chen.
Mt. Xiaobajian is like a compact version of Mt. Dabajian. Though it’s not as stately or prominent as Mt. Dabajian, it too has a recognizable layered pyramid shape, and its cliffs are every bit as precipitous, giving the mountain its own unique grandeur.
The Atayal and Saisiyat peoples both revere Mt. Dabajian as a sacred place of ancestral origin, and so it was long off limits to climbing. It was only in 1927 that it was first scaled by Japanese mountaineers.
NTU geologist Chen reminds us that hikers visiting these mountains, when gazing from afar at Holy Ridge and the chain of peaks, should not forget to look down at the ground under their feet and seek out the tiny traces left in the rocks around them.
Fossils reveal an ancient ecosystemLong ago, the entire Xueshan Range was part of an area of continental shelf lying beneath a shallow sea between a few dozen and 200 meters deep. The thick sandstone of Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian came from a marine shoreface zone within 20 meters of the coastline.
Tens of millions of years ago, Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian, as well as the entire Xueshan Range, lay in a shallow seacoast environment, accumulating sediments from the Eurasian landmass, while also preserving shells, plankton and benthic organisms.
As if riding a geological rollercoaster, fossils of ancient marine organisms were lifted from the seashore to the mountaintop.
Says Chen, most of these organisms are now extinct, but the trace fossils they left behind from the time they were active include marks from crawling, nest building, foraging, burrowing and resting, all engraved into the rocks and the cliff faces.
“The active orogeny of this young island of Taiwan is still pushing Mt. Dabajian upward by about one centimeter a year. But at the same time it’s being broken down by inevitable erosion.”
Chen points out that the sides of Mt. Dabajian have been crumbling recently, the original black rock layers falling away to expose bright yellow rock face. From the color differences, we can see the progress of change in these mountains. As for what Mt. Dabajian and Mt. Xiaobajian will look like in the future, only time will tell!