• Title/Summary/Keyword: 노면 확대 및 분기

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Typology of Deteriorated Hiking Trails in Mountain National Parks of Korea (산악 국립공원 등산로의 훼손 유형과 요인)

  • Kim, Tae-Ho
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.416-431
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    • 2011
  • Hiking trails in Mt Jiri, and Mt Halla, National Park have been examined in terms of their degrading factors. The trails are deteriorated by natural erosion processes as well as human trampling. Trail deterioration is classified into tread lowering, sidewall retreat, path widening and divergence based upon a place where erosional processes occur. Tread lowering and sidewall retreat is generally produced by natural erosion factors, whereas path widening and divergence is generated by human trampling. Rainwash is the most contributing process to tread lowering. By contrast, several processes such as rainwash, needle ice action, deflation, tree falling and animal activity play a major role in sidewall retreat according to physical conditions of a hiking trail. Path widening and divergence could be classified by a factor producing human trampling. There are lots of cases related to rainwash such as the tree root, gravel, and bedrock, exposed by a surface flow lowering a tread and the riser produced by tread scouring. A puddle of rainwater on a flat tread and a fallen tree of Abies koreana in a forest region are also major factors to cause path widening and divergence. A paved tread with stones encourages a hiker to walk out of a trail. Taking a shortcut also results in path widening and divergence without a factor giving a hiker inconvenience on a trail.

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Types and Factors of Trail Degradtion in Daisetsuzan National Park, Hokkaido, Northern Japan (일본 홋카이도 다이세츠산 국립공원 등산로의 훼손 유형 및 요인)

  • KIM, Taeho
    • Journal of The Geomorphological Association of Korea
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    • v.19 no.2
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    • pp.187-195
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    • 2012
  • Daisetsuzan National Park in Hokkaido, Japan, has an extensive alpine region due to the topographic feature of lava plateau, and exhibits the surface geology largely composed of pyroclastic materials. In addition, the peak season of mountain climbing in the park coincides with a snow-melting period, resulting in severe soil erosion along hiking trails generated by human trampling, snow-melting water and pipkrake. Trail section has been particularly enlarged because the snow-melting water scours a trail surface and the pipkrake erodes sidewalls of a trapezoid-shaped trail. The scoured tread also forces hikers to walk out of a trail, and then frequently brings about path divergence as well as path widening. The soil particles, which are produced by erosional processes in a slope reach, flow downward, and cause the secondary trail degradation by covering a tread in a flat reach and nearby grassland.

Analysis of Physical Characteristics and Deterioration Type of Trail in National Parks (국립공원 탐방로의 물리적 특성 및 훼손유형 분석 - 6개 국립공원을 대상으로 -)

  • Jeong, Won-Ok;Ma, Ho-Seop;Kang, Won-Seok
    • Journal of agriculture & life science
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    • v.46 no.1
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    • pp.17-27
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    • 2012
  • The purpose of this study is to analyze the trail deterioration condition and to obtain the information for the desirable maintenance and restoration of trail in national parks. The results obtained from this study were summarized as follows; The physical characteristics of trail were surveyed at the total 778 point for 204.5 km in length. As a result, the average degree of trail was $14.6^{\circ}$, average trail width was 1.5m and average bared trail width was 1.1 m. Major deterioration types of trail were trail deepen (37%), root exposed, widen, diverged, rock exposed and slope erosion in order of frequency. Deterioration class of trail were that non-deterioration was 165.34 km (80.9%), heavy class was 9.08 km, middle class was 12.69 km and light class was 17.39 km and the deterioration rate was 19.1%.