Bukit Bunuh

Coordinates: 5°04′30″N 100°58′30″E / 5.07500°N 100.97500°E / 5.07500; 100.97500
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Bukit Bunuh
Kill Hill
Bukit Bunuh is located in Malaysia
Bukit Bunuh
Bukit Bunuh
Highest point
Elevation180 m (590 ft)
Coordinates5°04′30″N 100°58′30″E / 5.07500°N 100.97500°E / 5.07500; 100.97500
Geography
LocationPerak, Malaysia

Bukit Bunuh is a 180 m (590 ft) hill located within an oil palm plantation in Perak, Malaysia. The site is of geological and palaeoarchaeological interest.[1]

The 4 km2 (1.5 sq mi) area showed existence of the species Homo erectus dating over 1.83 million years ago. The area was surveyed by archeologists in the 1980s but evidence of prehistoric human civilisation was discovered in 2001 when agricultural activities uncovered impactite—rocks modified or created from a suspected meteorite impacts. In 2009, the discovery of a hand axes was announced. The area is currently the oldest known workshop for crafting tools prior to 1.83 million years ago.[2]

An impact event has been proposed to have destroyed the area's Paleolithic culture 1.83 million years ago. Geological evidence of an impact event was the presence of suevite and impact breccias. Dating of the event suggest it occurred 1.34–1.84 million years ago. The suspected impact crater lies between two mountain ranges to the east and west: the Titiwangsa and Bintang mountains, respectively. The Perak River cuts through the supposed structure. Rocks in the area include alluvium and tephra from the Toba volcano, dating to the Quaternary, and granite from the Triassic, which is part of a pluton.[3]

Platinum group elements (PGEs), a strong indicator of meteorite impact events, were largely absent in the rock samples studied for an article published in the journal Current Science in 2015. The authors concluded that the presence of an impact structure was ambiguous. Several possible reasons may explain the lack of PGE: The projectile was of the achondrite type, hence contained low PGEs, and a shallow-angle impact of under 45° may cause vapourized remnants of the projectile (high or low in PGEs) to escape the crater, leaving no traces in the impact area. A similar example is the Chicxulub crater, which shows no detectable traces of the projectile, though the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary formation worldwide indicated high PGEs concentration.[3]

In a separate 2012 study published in Sains Malaysiana, gravity measurements to identify gravity anomalies in the area proposed the presence of a crater with a diameter of 2.5 km (1.6 mi) and extending to 300 m (980 ft) depth. A Bouguer anomaly map of the area also identified two possible impact craters north and south of Bukit Bunuh.[4] Other estimates suggest a diameter of 5–6 km (3.1–3.7 mi).[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "#JOM! GO: Archaeological wonders". New Straits Times. 1 July 2021. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  2. ^ "Antara mitos dan sejarah manusia Homo Erectus yang sudah wujud di Bukit Bunuh yang mengubah sejarah dunia" (in Malay). UtusTV. 23 February 2022. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  3. ^ a b Quek, Long Xiang; Ghani, A. A; Badruldin, Muhammad Hafifi; Mokhtar, Saidin; Harith, Zuhar Zahir; Roselee, M. Hatta (2015). "Platinum Group Elements in Proximal Impactites of the Bukit Bunuh Impact Structure, Malaysia". Current Science. 109 (12). doi:10.18520/v109/i12/2303-2308.
  4. ^ Samsudin, Abdul Rahim; Harun, Abdul Rahim; Arifin, Mohd Hariri; Hamzah, Umar; Mokhtar, Saidin; Karamah, M Shyeh Sahibul (2012). "Gravity Investigation of the Bukit Bunuh Impact Crater at Lenggong, Perak, Malaysia" (PDF). Sains Malaysiana. 41 (12): 1629–1634.
  5. ^ Jinmin, Mark; Saad, Rosli; Nordiana, M.M.; Mokhtar, Saidin (2017). "Trilogy possible meteorite impact crater at Bukit Bunuh, Malaysia using 2-D electrical resistivity imaging". AIP Conference Proceedings. 1861 (1): 030012. doi:10.1063/1.4990899.

Further reading[edit]