Maliau Basin

4°49′49″N 116°54′01″E / 4.83040°N 116.90020°E / 4.83040; 116.90020Area588 km2 (227 sq mi)Established1981Governing bodyYayasan Sabah Group

Maliau Basin (Malay: Lembangan Maliau) or also Maliau Basin Conservation Area, is a region in Tongod District of Sabah, Malaysia, which represents a geological catchment surrounding the Maliau River. Located around the centre of Sabah in the Sandakan Division, it was designated as a conservation area by the Sabah Foundation (Yayasan Sabah) in 1981. Later in 1997 the Sabah State Assembly gazetted the Basin as a Protection Forest Reserve (Class I) with a total area of 588 square kilometres. The region also features Mount Lotung (1667 metres), Maliau Falls, and Lake Linumunsut. Efforts are underway to nominate the area as a World Heritage Site.[1] In 2011, the Maliau Basin Studies Centre opened, a large field centre to serve as a basis for studies and teaching carried out in Maliau by naturalists, biologists, and groups of field course students (e.g., Sheffield University, Griffith University, Otago University, and the citizen-science organisation Taxon Expeditions).

References

  1. ^ Kaur, Jaswinder. "Maliau: Sabah’s Lost World", New Straits Times, 26 June 2006

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maliau Basin.
  • Official website of the conservation area
  • Information on Maliau Basin
  • Information from Wild Asia
  • NusantaraKu Maliau Basin Sabah's lost world
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Protected areas of Sabah
World Heritage Site
  • Kinabalu National Park
State parksProtection forest reservesOther nature reserves and sanctuaries


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