• Title/Summary/Keyword: Haeju granite

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Study for Selection of Replica Stone of the Stele for Buddhist Monk Wonjong at Yeoju Godalsa Temple Site using Magnetic Susceptibility (전암대자율을 이용한 여주 고달사지 원종대사탑비 비신의 복제용 석재 선정 연구)

  • Lee, Myeong Seong;Chun, Yu Gun;Kim, Jiyoung
    • The Journal of the Petrological Society of Korea
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    • v.25 no.3
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    • pp.299-310
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    • 2016
  • The Stele for Buddhist Monk Wonjong at Godalsa Temple Site was destroyed a long time ago. Only the tortoise-shaped pedestal and the ornamental capstone in the form of a hornless dragon remain at the site and the broken stele body is stored at the National Museum of Korea today. The stele is made of two kinds of rocks that are coarse-grained biotite granite for the pedestal and the capstone, and fine-grained biotite granite including hornblende assemblages and feldspar phenocrysts for the stele body. The coarse-grained biotite granite of the pedestal and capstone showed same magnetic susceptibility and lithological characteristics with biotite granite outcrops in Yeoju area, whereas the fine-grained granite of the stele body did not. To find a provenance of the stele body stone, we investigated Korean granites in terms of magnetic susceptibility, lithology and old recordings about construction process of the stele. As a result, Haeju granite is the most likely to be a cognate rock of the stele body stone as it has same texture and lithological characteristics like color, hornblende assemblages, mineral composition and magnetic susceptibility. It is imported from Haeju (North Korea) to South Korea via China commercially, and the most suitable for a replica stone of the stele body.

Granulites of northern korea (한반도 북부의 백립암)

  • Glebovitsky, V.A.;Sedova, I.S.;Bushmin, S.A.;Vapnik, Ye.A.;Buiko, A.K.
    • The Journal of the Petrological Society of Korea
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    • v.3 no.3
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    • pp.196-219
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    • 1994
  • Granulite complexes in northern (the Nangnim block), eastern (ther Kimchaek zone of the Macheonryong belt) and southern (separate windows among upper Proterozoic structure such as the Wonsan, Nampo and Haeju granulites) parts of the Northern Korea are studied. Multistage deformations, metamorphic and migmatitic events, and granite formations are recognized in these granulite complexes. Mineral thermobarometry and fluid inclusion investigationss are used to establish the P-T evolutionary trends during prograde and retrograde metamorphic events. The peak metamorphism of granulites is characterized by temperature near $800^{\circ}C$ and pressure near 5.5-6 kb. Retrograde evolution includes cooling at constant pressure or with variable pressure ranging up to 7-8 kb. This P-T change corresponds to the transition from high to moderate or low geothermal gradient. The subsequent cooling is ac-companied by significant decompression to 3-4 kb.

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