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On acid igneous rocks
Note:
All information on soils were from the Land Resource Study 20 series of books
(Volumes 1 to 5), published by the Land Resources Division, Ministry of Overseas
Development , UK.
The
Kinabalu Association is the only association mapped on acid igneous rocks.
Kinabalu
Association (15)
The
Kinabalu Association occurs notably on Mt Kinabalu and also on less imposing
mountains to the east. Mt. Kinabalu, at 4,101 m, is the highest mountain in
Southeast Asia. It has a summit with isolated peaks and pinnacles rising steeply
above a general plateau level of 3,650 to 3,800 m.
Its
topography result from the presence of an ice-cap during the Pleistocene period
and glacial features include cirques, hanging valleys, valleys with U-shaped
cross-section, markings such as striations and grooves and steep cliffs probably
representing ice falls. There are many steep cliffs particularly on the western side
of the mountain where they are up to 1,500 m high. The mountain is formed of
acid igneous rocks, notably hornblende adamellite and biotite granodiorite.