Raymond’s Geology Blog

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September 22, 2025

News and notes

Geese in the City Hydro Fountain, Memorial Provincial Park, North of the Manitoba Legislature, Winnipeg

This week, before going on to discuss the geology and mineral resources of the Maldives, we will first look at some news items I thought were interesting. If you enjoy my blogs, bookmark the site and check Monday mornings rather than relying on social media postings which can get lost in the shuffle.

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Interactive Wildfire Map September 22, 2025
Credit: ©Canadian Wildland Fire Information System

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September 22, 2025

Geology and Mineral Resources – Maldives

Introduction

Figure 1a – Maldives
Credit: CIA World Factbook, public domain

Figure 1b – Location of Maldives
Credit: CIA World Factbook, public domain

The Republic of Maldives is a country of 388,858 people living on 1,192 islands grouped into 26 atolls in the Indian Ocean, southwest of India and Sri Lanka. The country has an area of 298 square kilometres, most of it barely above sea level. It is a moderately prosperous country with a per capita GDP (PPP) of $34,322 and a high Human Development Index of 0.766. The main industries are tourism and fishing. For more details on the country, check out the CIA World Factbook on the Maldives as well as the Wikipedia article.

Geology

Figure 2 – Track of the Reunion Hotspot
Credit: Figure 3 in Behera & Sen 2014

The origin of the Maldives Archipelago lies in the movement of the Indian Plate over the Reunion Hotpot and the creation of a volcanic seamount approximately 57.2 million years ago (± 1.8 m.y.), during the Paleocene. This seamount formed the basement on which the carbonate platform grew during the Cenozoic. From the Paleocene to the Quaternary, the growth of coral reefs on the volcanic basement created the modern Maldives Islands.

I’ve discussed carbonate platforms before in my discussions of the Bahamas and Kiribati, so I won’t repeat it here. The surficial geology of the Maldives shows predominately Quaternary aged limestones derived from coral.

For further information; Mindat.org suggests the following refernces on the geology of the Maldives:

Mineral Resources

Figure 3 – Mineral Occurrence Map, Maldives
Credit: ©Mindat.org

The USGS does not list the Maldives in their International Minerals Statistics and Information, not surprising for a country whose surficial geology is exclusively coral limestone. Mindat.org indicates that phosphorite is know to occur on the islands. There have been oil exploration activities in the vicinity of the Maldives, however there does not appear to be an interest in developing these potential resources.

Summary

Figure 4 – Malé, Capital of Maldives
Credit: Shahee Ilyas, Creative Commons
 Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license

The Maldives appear to be a wonderful place to take a vacation, but is unlikely to provide much opportunity for a geologist to explore mineral resources. Any exploration for minerals such as off-shore oil and gas is currently seen as a threat to their main industries of tourism and fishing. Still, they could change their minds on that (they say that they need development) and there would be no end of geologists, especially from cold climates, who would love to work there.

If you want to go to the Maldives, you might want to go soon. Whatever its cause, climate change and sea-level rise are going to adversely affect small islands like the Maldives. To make the point about the dire threat of climate change, in 2022 the Cabinet of the Maldives Government held a Cabinet meeting – underwater. Recently, the Maldives government published an action plan for adapting to the projected changes in sea-level.

Stunts and climate-science soap opera aside, there is very real potential for disaster in the Maldives. Prayers and thoughts may not be enough, the people on the Maldives will need a place to go if and when the sea swallows their island paradise since it is unlikely that we can prevent the inexorable process of climate change anytime soon. Guess what? Mother Nature is a bitch.

That wraps it up for this short take on the Maldives. Followup on the links if any of this interests you.

Standard Caveat

J. Robert Oppenheimer on freedom and scientific inquiry

The purpose of my weblog postings is to spark people's curiosity in geology. Don't entirely believe me until you've done your own research and checked the evidence. If I have sparked your curiosity in the subject of this posting, follow up with some of the links provided here. If you want to, go out into the field and examine some rocks on your own with the help of a good field guide. Follow the evidence and make up your own mind.

In science, the only authority is the evidence.