• Title/Summary/Keyword: Turtle

Search Result 216, Processing Time 0.025 seconds

Development of Model Turtle Boat for Teaching-Learning in the Elementary and Secondary Schools (초·중등학교 교수-학습용 모형 거북선 개발)

  • Choi, Jun-Seop;Park, Sang-Jin
    • 대한공업교육학회지
    • /
    • v.33 no.2
    • /
    • pp.154-169
    • /
    • 2008
  • The purpose of this study was to develop learning model turtle boat of teaching-learning materials in order for the students to enhance knowledge, skill and attitude and give interest in transportation technology, and also to recognize the legacy of Korean history. The model turtle boat was developed through three major phases; preparation, development and improvement. The main results of this study were as follows: First, the model turtle boat was developed for students to cultivate design, fabrication, process abilities, and also technological literacy by experimenting and fabricating for themselves. Second, the learning model turtle boat developed is equipped with the sail using natural energy, the linkage and screw applying a mechanical energy and solar cell using solar energy among driving energy. Third, in order to increase interest and attitude regarding a ship in transportation technology, the model turtle boat was developed for students to be able to operate with wireless transceiver on water. Fourth, the model turtle boat was developed to apply the teaching and learning materials for the classes of experiment and practice in primary and secondary schools.

Free Radical Scavenging Activity of Enzymatic Hydrolyzates of Hot Water Extract from the Shell of Reeve's Turtle (Chinemys reevesii)

  • Je, Jae-Young;Kim, Eun-Kyung;Park, Pyo-Jam;Kang, Mi-Kyung;Ahn, Chang-Bum
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
    • /
    • v.11 no.2
    • /
    • pp.71-75
    • /
    • 2008
  • The shell of Reeve's turtle has been used as a traditional folk medicine in Korea. We produced a hot water extract from Reeve's turtle shell according to the traditional medical practice. To release bioactive peptides, the hot water extract was enzymatically hydrolyzed with various proteases, and the free radical scavenging activity of the hydrolysate was investigated against 1,1-diphenyl-2-picryl-hydrazyl (DPPH), hydroxyl and peroxyl radicals. The free radical scavenging activity of the enzymatic hydrolysates varied from 1 to 79% depending on the enzymes, free radical species, and concentration. The $EC_{50}$ values demonstrated that the enzymatic hydrolysates of hot water extract from the shell of Reeve's turtle are potential antioxidants.

"Married Chastity": The Language of Paradox in Shakespeare's "The Phoenix and the Turtle" ("결혼한 순결"-「불사조와 산비둘기」와 역설의 언어)

  • Park, WooSoo
    • Journal of English Language & Literature
    • /
    • v.59 no.4
    • /
    • pp.527-544
    • /
    • 2013
  • William Shakespeare's dirge, "The Phoenix and the Turtle," is still a crux in the Shakespearean canon and interpretation. The poem is still believed a dark allegory dealing with some arcane and obscure courtly matters and politics. However, we cannot recover its allegorical significance. This interpretive situation enforces us to read the poem as a self-conscious artwork in terms of its paradoxical language and meta-poetic metaphors. Paradox, as a subspecies of metaphor, challenges categorical and judgmental absolutes, and produces a sense of wonder in reconciling the logically contradictory opposites. In this poem the urn containing the ashes of the phoenix and the turtle is the icon of the mysterious unity of art, born of the wonderful marriage of male and female. Shakespeare's poem demonstrates in itself the magical power of poetic language in transforming an elegy into an epithalamion. The union of the phoenix and the turtle defies the singularity of their respective entity, and at the same time it retains their distinctive particularity of the two-ness. This neo-Platonic mystery of the "married chastity" is a paradox which confounds reason and verifies the poetic truth of imaginative intellect. The marriage of Christian perichoresis is crystallized in the artwork of the urn, which is admired at by posterity, though the marriage was issueless, due to its passing virtue. "The Phoenix and the Turtle" depicts the metaphor-making process and its effect, the poem.

Renal and Hormonal Responses to Atrial Natriuretic Peptide and Furosemide in the Freshwater Turtle, Amyda japonica (자라 신장기능에 미치는 Atrial Natriuretic Peptide의 효과)

  • Cho, Kyung-Woo;Kim, Suhn-Hee;Koh, Gou-Young;Seul, Kyung-Hwan
    • The Korean Journal of Physiology
    • /
    • v.21 no.1
    • /
    • pp.13-22
    • /
    • 1987
  • Effects of synthetic atrial natriuretic peptide and furosemide on the cardiovascular and renal functions were examined in the freshwater turtle, Amyda japonica. Both atria and ventricle of turtle contained an immunoreactive atrial natriuretic peptide. Synthetic rat atrial natriuretic peptide (atriopeptin III) and turtle atrial extract caused a decrease in mean arterial blood pressure and the vasodepressor effect was dose-dependent. In hydrated turtles received either atriopeptin III or turtle atrial extract, no significant change in renal function was observed until 100 min except a slight natriuresis at 60 or 100 min after injection of 30 ug/kg atriopeptin III or atrial extract, respectively. However, furosemide, 2 mg/kg, caused marked diuresis, natriuresis and kaliuresis. In non-hydrated turtles, no significant change in renal function was observed until 6 hrs following injection of 30 ug/kg atriopeptin III. Plasma aldosterone decreased at 2 hr and increased at 24 hr after injection of atriopeptin III although plasma renin concentration did not change. But, furosemide caused persistent diuresis, natriuresis and kaliuresis. Additionally, plasma aldosterone and renin concentrations were significantly increased at 24 hrs after injection of furosemide. In conclusion, we suggest that the freshwater turtle may have an atrial natriuretic peptide in heart and vascular receptors for atrial natriuretic peptide, and that atrial natriuretic peptide is more important in the regulation of blood pressure rather than that of renal function in freshwater turtles. We also suggest that an increased plasma renin concentration caused by furosemide may not be due to the sodium concentration delivered to macula densa, but due to the dehydration caused by persistent diuresis and natriuresis.

  • PDF

First report on the non-native species, Western painted turtle (Chrysemys picta bellii), in the wild, Republic of Korea (국내 야생에서 처음 발견된 외래종, 서부비단거북(Chrysemys picta bellii)의 관찰 사례 보고)

  • Park, Il-Kook;Lee, Kyungwon;Jeong, Ji-Hyun;Lee, Hyun-Been;Koo, Kyo Soung
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
    • /
    • v.38 no.1
    • /
    • pp.16-20
    • /
    • 2020
  • On May 27, 2019, a non-native turtle was discovered at Ilsan Lake Park, Janghang-dong, Ilsandong-gu, Goyang-si, Republic of Korea. The turtle was identified as a western painted turtle (Emydidae: Chrysemys picta bellii) based on the external morphology, plastron color, plastron pattern, stripes on the side of the head, and shape of the carapace. In the lake park, another non-native turtle was observed sunbathing on the same rock. In this paper, we firstly reported the confirmed presence of a western painted turtle in the wild of Korea. Unfortunately, various non-native turtles are continuously reported in Korean ecosystems. Therefore, we highlight that continuous surveying and reporting of the non-native species is important to their management.

Educational Application of Turtle Representation System for Linking Cube Mathematics Class (연결큐브 수업을 위한 거북표현체계의 활용)

  • Jeong, Hye Rim;Lee, Seung Joo;Cho, Han Hyuk
    • School Mathematics
    • /
    • v.18 no.2
    • /
    • pp.323-348
    • /
    • 2016
  • The 2009 revised national mathematics curriculum have inserted mathematical 'linking cube' activities in the 6th grade math classes to improve students' spatial problem solving abilities and communication skills. However, we found that it was hard for teachers to teach problem solving and communication skills due to the absence of mathematical way of representing linking cubes in the classroom. In this paper, we propose 3D 'turtle representation system' as teaching and learning tools for linking cube activities. After using turtle representation system for linking cube activities, teachers responded that turtle representation system is a valuable problem solving and communication tools for the linking cube mathematics classes. We conclude that turtle representation system is a well designed teaching and learning tools for linking cube activities, and there are lots of educational meanings in the 3D turtle representation system.

Triggers of turtle neck syndrome according to pharmacist's height and tabletop height (약사의 신장과 탁상높이에 따른 거북목 증후군 유발요인)

  • Eun-Gwang Lee;Min-Sun Lee
    • Journal of Digital Policy
    • /
    • v.3 no.2
    • /
    • pp.15-22
    • /
    • 2024
  • This study was conducted to identify the cause of turtle neck syndrome that occurs in a pharmacists and the relationship between the height and table height and to suggest a table height appropriate for height. By conducting correlation and regression analysis of the turtle neck index, NDI, and VAS. As a result of calculating, the relationship between the pharmacist's height and table height, which is good for preventing turtle neck, is less than about 65cm, and it was proven that the height of the table is a major factor in causing or worsening turtle neck syndrome. It is believed that further follow-up research is needed to determine whether the calculated through this paper is effective and can be applied to other occupational groups.

Distribution, habitat characteristics, and diet of freshwater turtles in the surrounding area of the Seomjin River and Nam River in southern Korea

  • Lee, Heon-Joo;Park, Dae-Sik
    • Journal of Ecology and Environment
    • /
    • v.33 no.3
    • /
    • pp.237-244
    • /
    • 2010
  • In this study, we evaluated the distribution, habitat characteristics, and diet of two Korean freshwater turtle species (Chinemys reevesii, Pelodiscus sinensis) and an invasive turtle species (Trachemys scripta elegans) in the area surrounding the Seomjin River and the Nam River. We surveyed basking turtles in multiple locations along a 48-km stretch of the Seomjin River and in 99 reservoirs distributed along the Seomjin and Nam rivers from June to September, 2009. We observed 8 and 6 red-eared turtles in 3 reservoirs and at 3 sites in the Seomjin River, respectively, and 33 Reeve's turtles in 9 reservoirs. There were also 28 and 16 mud turtles detected at 15 sites along the Seomjin River and in 8 reservoirs, respectively. Among the 14 biotic and abiotic habitat characteristics that might influence the abundance of freshwater turtles in reservoirs, only the distance between a reservoir and the nearest residential areas was correlated negatively with abundance. With regard to the diet, all Reeve's and red-eared turtles investigated were determined to forage on water snails. Some turtles also foraged on vegetation and aquatic invertebrates. Additionally, we found fish in the stomach of one of the Reeve's turtles, and dragonflies in the stomachs of two red-eared turtles.

The Effects of Cervical Extension-Traction Exercise on Cervical Alignment, Pain, and Neck Disability in Patients with Mild Turtle Syndrome (경추 신전-견인 운동이 경증 거북목증후군 환자의 경추정렬, 통증, 기능장애에 미치는 영향)

  • Han, Hyo-jin;Lee, Jae-nam;Hyun, Ki-hoon;Yang, Young-sik
    • The Journal of Korean Academy of Orthopedic Manual Physical Therapy
    • /
    • v.25 no.2
    • /
    • pp.1-10
    • /
    • 2019
  • Background: The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of cervical extension-traction exercise on cervical alignment, pain, and neck disability in patients with mild turtle syndrome. Methods: Thirty two outpatients with mild turtle neck syndrome were recruited and randomly divided into two groups. Participants in the experimental group was applied cervical extension-traction exercise (CETE, n=16) and in the control group applied cervical stabilization exercise (CSE, n=16) for three times a week for 4 weeks. Results: Cobb angle and Jochumsen depth were CETE showed significant difference within the group post test (p<.05). And the CETE was significantly higher than the CSE. In the pressure pain threshold, both CETE and CSE showed significant differences within post test (p<.05). And the CETE was significantly higher than the CSE. Neck disability index were significant (p<.05) in the CETE post test. There was no significant difference between the two groups. Conclusion: Our results of this study showed that applying cervical extension-traction exercise to patients with mild turtle syndrome improved cervical alignment, pain and neck dysfunction.

An Outbreak of Trichinellosis by Consumption of Raw Soft-Shelled Turtle Meat in Korea

  • Jeong, Joon Taek;Seo, Min;Hong, Sung-Tae;Kim, Young Keun
    • Parasites, Hosts and Diseases
    • /
    • v.53 no.2
    • /
    • pp.219-222
    • /
    • 2015
  • Trichinellosis transmission to humans via the consumption of reptile meat is rare worldwide. In Korea, however, 2 such outbreaks, possibly via consumption of soft-shelled turtle meat, have occurred in 2 successive years. In 17 August 2014, 6 patients were admitted to Wonju Severance Christian Hospital complaining of myalgia, fever, and headache. Eosinophilia was the indication of the initial laboratory results, and they were eventually diagnosed as trichinellosis by ELISA. All of the patients worked at the same company and had eaten raw soft-shelled turtle meat at a company dinner 10 days prior to their admission. They were treated with albendazole for 2 weeks, upon which all of their symptoms disappeared. This is the 8th report on human trichinellosis in Korea, and the second implicating raw soft-shelled turtle meat.