Abstract

Pulau Tiga is Malaysia’s largest mud volcano and the entire island is famously reported to have suddenly appeared in September 1897. The story of Pulau Tiga’s ‘birth’ following two large earthquakes in the Philippines is widespread, being found in scientific papers, media stories, Wikipedia and thousands of websites. This study ‘fact checks’ whether Pulau Tiga really did first appear in 1897. The event is described in detail in one 1986 scientific study, and the idea of Pulau Tiga’s sudden appearance is supported by instances of islands being created by large mud volcano eruptions, including Pulau Batu Hairan offshore Malaysia in 1988. However, maps of Borneo published prior to 1897 show that Pulau Tiga was charted on maps dating back to 1554, and specifically named on over 40 maps. These maps conclusively prove that Pulau Tiga did not suddenly appear in 1897, and also indicate that Pulau Tiga has had approximately the same shape for centuries, demonstrating the island was also not partially formed in 1897. A review of newspapers and scientific reports from 1897 to 1904 reveal that two new islands did emerge offshore northern Borneo on the 21st of September 1897, but neither was Pulau Tiga. New mud volcano islands temporarily appeared off the western Klias Peninsula near Bukit Tomboh, and off the northern tip of Sabah at the approximate position of Pulau Batu Hairan. The origin of Pulau Tiga’s 1897 birth ‘myth’ is proposed to be a 1986 study by McManus and Tate, who appear to have confused reports of an island forming off the Klias Peninsula in 1897 with an eruption of Pulau Tiga. This study definitively ‘busts’ the myth of Pulau Tiga’s 1897 birth and unearths details of Malaysia’s history of large mud volcano eruptions that have been largely forgotten by the geoscience community.

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