Other Sights in South Korea

 

A good geology field trip isn't just looking at rocks.

 

 

Red hot peppers.  Many reddish-colored foods in Korea are spicy hot - be warned!

 


 

ICHEON

 

xxx

 

 


 

CHIAKSAN NATIONAL PARK

 

 

National Park.  The Chiak Mountains here are mostly floored. Still heading eastward, toward the Taebaeksan Basin, where Cambrian rocks & fossils await.

 

In north-central South Korea, along Highway 55, we pass by the beautiful forested mountains of Chiaksan by Archean metamorphic rocks of the Kyonggi Gneiss Complex.

 


 

TAEBAEK CITY

 

Taebaek is an old coal-mining town in southeastern Gangwon South Province, eastern South Korea.  It is the closest city to two classic Cambrian sections in eastern Korea's Taebaeksan Basin.

 

 

 

On our way to dinner - the sun has set, providing nicely silhouetted mountains near the northern entrance to Taebaeksan Provincial Park.

 

 

An interestingly-lit restaurant in Yuhwanggol, on the southwestern outskirts of Taebaek City.  Harsh & garish & energy-wasting & light-polluting pinkish-orange lights that are seen everywhere in modern America at nightime are refreshingly absent here.

 

 

 

The main restaurant hall.  Notice everyone is sitting on the floor.  I'm not used to that!  My legs felt quite cramped at dinner & I did a lot of shifting around (as did others in our group).  Dinner was boiled beef with vegetables - excellent, and I mean excellent.

 

One of my dinner partners was Soon Il Hong, the mayor of Taebaek city.  He offered me some sojo as soon as dinner started.  Sojo is a strong, clear Korean liquor - it's very inexpensive (cheaper than bottled water or beer or pop).  I'm not a drinker, but when the mayor of Taebaek, South Korea offers you something, how can you refuse?  I indulge.

 

 

 

The restaurant grounds had carved statues of the Korean zodiac symbols.  They are carved from rock - they are not cement castings or anything like that.  The rock is apparently masanite, a Cretaceous granodiorite used for exterior decorative purposes & building stone in many parts of South Korea.  The pic below of a thinking monkey (left) gives a sense of scale.

 

 


 

TAEBAEK CITY (cont.)

 

I spent 3 days in the Taebaek City area.  The destination for the 2nd day's dinner was downtown Taebaek.  Our group got some stares from the locals, including a little Korean girl who was delighted to practice her English with us.

 

 

Walking to the restaurant at dusk.

 

 

In America, a sign like this wouldn't engender much confidence in food quality.

 

 

Next door was another restaurant with this street-side sign.  This was our destination.

 

 

A fantastic feast laid out for us.

But, another meal sitting down on the floor with cramped legs.

Well, I suppose you get used to it.  (Nope)

Here I am with some of my Cambrian colleagues from Sweden, Germany, France, China, and Korea.

 


Our third dinner was also at a place in downtown Taebaek City - this time we're eating outside (on chairs!!) at a Korean “country-style” restaurant.  Fantastic!  We're cooking beef over a hot & scary-looking flame-thingy in the center of our table.

Cambrian researchers from left to right: James St. John (me!) (America), Shanchi Peng (China), Jim Jago (Australia).

Our table was the only one surrounded by others - scary flames shooting up as beef drippings caught fire encircled us during the entire dinner.  FUN!

The green bottle is sojo - we were toasting trilobite genera all night long.

 


 

TAEBAEK CITY (cont.)

 

I stayed at the Sky Hotel during the three days looking at geology in the Taebaek City area.  This is the best place to stay in the entire Taebaek area.  This was a nice place - I had a single room with a terrace/balcony.  I was up on the fourth floor, but it was labeled the fifth floor.  I noticed that the floor numbering skipped the 4th floor.  I didn't find out why until well after returning from Korea.  Apparently, the Korean words for “four” and “death” are the same (“sa”).  So, a hotel's 4th floor in Korea is just as unlucky, if not more so, as a hotel's 13th floor in America.  I've even heard that many Koreans don't hang out in groups of four because of this.

 

 

The grounds of the Sky Hotel are apparently along an old rail line that hauled coal.  The railroad is ripped up, but the roadbed is apparent, as are chunks of coal that fell from the railcars.  The creek in the foreground is the Sodo River (Sodo Creek) (Sodocheon).

 

 

 

Interesting little sign having a caricature of a coal miner on the hotel grounds - a tribute to Taebaek's coal mining glory days.  A large, three-dimensional, rotating version of this made of flowers can be seen in downtown Taebaek.  After the coal mining industry collapsed in this area, Taebaek's population crashed from about 100,000 to about 70,000 today. 

 


 

The folded & faulted Taebaek Coalfield (aka Samchok Coalfield) in eastern Korea is east-west elongated in shape.  It contains economic concentrations of coal in the Late Paleozoic Pyeongan Supergroup.  The siliciclastics-dominated Pyeongan Supergroup is mid-Carboniferous to ?Triassic in age, and disconformably overlies the “Great Limestone Series” (= Cambro-Ordovician limestones of the Joseon Supergroup).

 

Coal occurs in the upper Geumcheon Formation (upper Moscovian Stage, upper Middle Pennsylvanian) and the lower Jangseong Formation (?Artinskian Stage, Lower Permian).  Economic concentrations of coal occur in the lower Jangseong.  Not surprisingly, both the Geumcheon & Jangseong Fms. are cyclothemic.

 


 

GUINSA TEMPLE

 

The Tientai order of Korean Buddhism originated at the Guinsa Temple Complex, located at Yunwha Ji in the Sobaek Mountain Range (Sobaeksan), Chungcheong North Province, South Korea.  The order claims over 1 million followers.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

My friend, Alex Lin (Jih-Pai Lin) from Taiwan, pointing out that the Guinsa Temple Complex mainly receives three groups of visitors - Korean speakers, Chinese speakers, and English speakers.

 


 

 

Three Cambrian colleagues at the Guinsa Temple Complex:

Hyun-A Hwang from Korea (left),

Jih-Pai Lin (“Alex”) from Taiwan (now an American citizen) (middle),

and Yuan Jin-Liang from China (right).

 


 

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