HWANGCHEON RIVER SECTION

 

Woraksan National Park is a gorgeous forested mountainous area in central South Korea (scenery pics of park).  Most of the park's mountainous scenery (including Mt. Worak) is developed on a weathered pluton of Bulguksa Granite, part of a Cretaceous-aged subduction zone complex.  Intrusion of the Bulguksa Granite has cooked the surrounding country rock somewhat.  "Woraksan" means "beyond-mountain mountain".

 

The Hwangcheon River (also transliterated as Gwangcheon River) is located south of Lake Chungju & runs along portions of the northern boundary of Woraksan Park.

 

The pics below show in-place rock exposures along the southwestern side of the Hwangcheon River.  These are silicified diamictites of the Hwanggangri Formation.  The unit ranges in thickness from 200 to 300 meters thick.  Diamictites (“pebbly mudstones”) are poorly sorted siliciclastic sedimentary rocks having a strongly bimodal grain size distribution.  Here, the rocks have pebble-sized clasts in a muddy matrix (now silicified).  The diamictite's clasts don't show up well in these pics, though (to get closer, we needed to wade through the bone-chillingly cold river water - none of us did).  Some diamictites approach the typical appearance of conglomerates.

 

 

 

Published research on Hwanggangri Formation diamictites indicates that clasts are composed of granite, gneiss, limestone, dolostone, shale, and quartzite.  Some of the clasts have been dated to 1.8 billion years (Paleoproterozoic).  The depositional age of this unit is unknown, however.  Its depositional environment is debated.  Some interpret the Hwanggangri diamictites as tillites (ancient glacial till), while others consider them to be subaqueous debris flow deposits in an ancient continental slope setting.

 

These rocks have been silicified & metamorphosed somewhat by contact metamorphism during intrusion of a nearby pluton (the Cretaceous-aged Bulguksa Granite).

 

GPS of site: 36° 52.638' North, 128° 08.856' East.

 


 

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