The Leizhou Peninsula is the third largest peninsula in
China with an area of c. located on the southwestern end of
Zhanjiang, Guangdong with the
Gulf of Tonkin to the west and the 30 km wide
Qiongzhou Strait to the south, separating the peninsula from
Hainan Island. , Hainan over the
Qiongzhou Strait. Geologically,
basalt terraces account for 43% of the peninsula's area. The rest is divided up between
marine terraces (27%) and
alluvial plains (17%). Leizhou Peninsula is dotted with a few dormant
volcanoes, beaches, and low-lying
diluvial plains. Leizhou has two separate
volcanic fields: a
Pleistocene–
Holocene field at the northern end of the peninsula west of
Zhanjiang Leibei Huoshanqun) and the northern end of the
Qionglei or Leiqiong volcanic field, which extends across the strait into northern Hainan
Leinan Huoshanqun). The volcanoes derive from the east-to-west tectonic extension and thinning of the
lithosphere connected with the creation of the
South China Sea's basin. Two Pleistocene-era
basaltic
stratovolcanoes are
Yingfengling and
Tianyang apart in the center of the peninsula. There is also a third volcanic field responsible for some of the islands offshore
Huoshanyan Daoyu). ==Wildlife==