• Title/Summary/Keyword: 유네스코 세계지질공원

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Sedimentary Environmental Change and the Formation Age of the Damyang Wetland, Southwestern Korea (한국 남서부 담양습지의 퇴적환경 변화와 형성시기 연구)

  • Shin, Seungwon;Kim, Jin-Cheol;Yi, Sangheon;Lee, Jin-Young;Choi, Taejin;Kim, Jong-Sun;Roh, Yul;Huh, Min;Cho, Hyeongseong
    • Journal of the Korean earth science society
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.39-54
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    • 2021
  • Damyang Wetland, a riverine wetland, has been designated as the first wetland protection area in South Korea and is a candidate area for the Mudeungsan Area UNESCO Global Geopark. The Damyang Wetland area is the upstream part of the Yeongsan River and is now a relatively wide plain. To reconstruct the sedimentary environment around the Damyang Wetland, core samples were obtained, and sedimentary facies analysis, AMS and OSL age dataings, grain size, and geochemical analyses were carried out. In addition, comprehensive sedimentary environment changes were reconstructed using previous core data obtained from this wetland area. In the Yeongsan River upstream area, where the Damyang Wetland is located, fluvial terrace deposits formed during the late Pleistocene are distributed in an area relatively far from the river. As a gravel layer is widely distributed throughout the plains, Holocene sediments were likely deposited in a braided river environment when the sea level stabilized after the middle Holocene. Then, as the sedimentary environment changed from a braided river to a meandering river, the influx of sand-dominated sediments increased, and a floodplain environment was formed around the river. In addition, based on the pollen data, it is inferred that the climate was warm and humid around 6,000 years ago, with wetland deposits forming afterward. The the trench survey results of the river area around the Damyang Wetland show that a well-rounded gravel layer occurs in the lower part, covered by the sand layer. The Damyang Wetland was likely formed after the construction of Damyang Lake in the 1970s, as muddy sediments were deposited on the sand layer.