Yu Shan

Map of Yu Shan (labeled as NIITAKA-YAMA) and surrounding area (1944) |p=Yùshān |w=Yü-shan |psp=Mount Morrison |l= |gr=Yuhshan |poj=Gio̍k-san |h=Ngiu̍k-Sân }}

| s2 = | p2 = Bātōngguān | w2 = Pa-tung-kuan | l2 = ''transcribing the Tsou name'' Patungkuonʉ | altname3 = Baiyushan | c3 = | p3 = Báiyùshān | w3 = Bai-yü-shan | gr3 = | l3 = | poj3 = | h3 = | altname4 = Xueshan | c4 = | p4 = Xuěshān | w4 = Hsueh-shan | tp4 = Syuěshan | l4 = | poj4 = Seh-soaⁿ | altname5 = Mugangshan | t5 = | s5 = | p5 = Mùgāngshān | w5 = Mu Kang-shan | l5 = }}

|p=Xīngāoshān |w=Hsin-kao Shan | kanji = |l= | hiragana = にいたかやま | katakana = | romaji = Niitakayama }}

Yu Shan or Yushan, also known as Mount Jade, Jade Mountain, Tongku Saveq or Mount Niitaka during Japanese rule, is the highest mountain in Taiwan at above sea level, giving Taiwan the 4th-highest maximum elevation of any island in the world. It is the highest point in the western Pacific region outside of the Kamchatka Peninsula. Yushan and its surrounding mountains belong to the Yushan Range. The area was once in the ocean; it rose to its current height because of the Eurasian Plate's movement over the Philippine Sea Plate. Yushan is ranked 40th by topographic isolation.

The mountains are now protected as the Yushan National Park. The national park is Taiwan's largest, highest, and least accessible national park. It contains the largest tract of wilderness remaining on the island.

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