Wudang Mountain is the holy land of Taoism in China, also known as Taihe Mountain, Xieluo Mountain, Shenshan Mountain and Shixian Mountain. It was called Taiyue, Xuan Yue and Da Yue in ancient times. Danjiangkou city, Shiyan City, in the northwest of Hubei Province. Xiangyang, a famous ancient city in the east, Shiyan and Checheng in the west, Shennongjia in the south, Danjiangkou Reservoir and Gaoxia in Pinghu in the north.
Longhu Mountain is located 20 kilometers southwest of Yingtan City, Jiangxi Province. In the middle of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Zhang Daoling, the founder of Zhengyi School, was an alchemist here. It is said that "when the Dragon and Tiger were born in Dan, the mountain was named after it". Tianmen Mountain is the highest, with an altitude of 1300m.
Laoshan, located in the east of Qingdao, was called Laoshan, Laoshan and Aoshan in ancient times. It is the main mountain range of Shandong Peninsula, and the highest peak of Laoshan Mountain is called Giant Peak, also called Laoding.
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In the Ming Dynasty, Wudang Mountain was named "Da Yue" and "Xuan Yue" by the emperor, and was honored as "Royal Palace View". Wudang Mountain is known as the "crown of five mountains", among which "four famous mountains are all arched and five immortals worship the Sect".
Longhu Mountain is a typical Danxia landform in China and the birthplace of Taoism in China. The Danxia landform of Longhu Mountain is two Danxia mountain bodies composed of late Cretaceous continental piedmont pluvial-alluvial fan massive red glutenite developed in the south of the middle section of Xinjiang Basin in southeastern China.
Laoshan Mountain is a part of the low mountain in Jiaodong. In the late Yanshanian movement about 0.8 ~ 1.29 billion years ago, there were lava eruption and extensive intrusion of granite, which gradually cooled and rose, forming the existing geological outline. Granite intrudes in the east to form the Laoshan Mountains, volcanic rocks in the west form the wavy plains, and rivers such as Mohe, Zhang Cun and Taoyuan in the middle form the hilly transition zone and small alluvial plains.
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-Wudang Mountain
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-Longhushan
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-Laoshan