Basalt Island or Fo Shek Chau (Chinese: 火石洲; Sidney Lau: Foh2 Sek6 Jau1) is an island of Hong Kong and administratively part of Sai Kung District. Together with Wang Chau and Bluff Island, it forms the Ung Kong (甕缸; Ung3 Gong1) Group[1] and is part of Hong Kong Global Geopark.

Location of Basalt Island
Basalt Island
Chinese火石洲
Basalt Island

Geography edit

Basalt Island is located south of Town Island and Wang Chau, east of Bluff Island and north of the Ninepin Group. Its highest elevation is 174 m.[2] Notably, despite its name is “Basalt Island”, the rocks that forms the island are indeed rhyolitic tuff.

History edit

On 21 December 1948, Basalt Island was the site of the first commercial airliner crash in Hong Kong,[3] in which all 28 passengers, including five women, one child and seven crew, were killed. CNAC flight XT-104 from Shanghai to Hong Kong Kai Tak Airport was operated by a C-54 Skymaster. Fog over the island was the official cause of the crash.[4]

Quentin Roosevelt II, the grandson of American president Theodore Roosevelt and then Senior Vice President of China National Aviation Corporation (CNAC), and Paul Yung, elder brother of Rong Yiren who was later to become Vice-President of the People's Republic of China, were among the casualties.

Debris remains near the site of the crash.

Conservation edit

The island was zoned as a Site of Special Scientific Interest in 1979.[5]

The Ung Kong Group Special Area (甕缸群島特別地區) covers 176.8 hectares and was designated in 2011.[6] It consists of Basalt Island, Bluff Island, Wang Chau, their surrounding islets, and Kam Chung Ngam (金鐘岩) in the southern part of Jin Island.[7] The geology of the area is characterised by volcanic rocks of the Cretaceous periods.[8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hong Kong Global Geopark
  2. ^ Hong Kong Global Geopark: Typical coastal terrain–Basalt Island
  3. ^ David Pickerell (19 November 2007). "Basalt Island Crash Investigation" (PDF). Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  4. ^ "33 Feared Killed in Air Crash". The China Mail. 1948-12-22. Retrieved 2023-03-01.
  5. ^ List of SSSIs in Hong Kong Archived 2009-10-27 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Country Parks & Special Areas". Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department.
  7. ^ "Double Haven and Others (Special Areas) Order 2010" (PDF). Legislative Council of Hong Kong. 20 October 2010.
  8. ^ "Five geologically important sites designated as special areas". Government of Hong Kong. 31 December 2010.

Further reading edit

External links edit

22°18′57″N 114°21′56″E / 22.31578°N 114.36562°E / 22.31578; 114.36562