• Title/Summary/Keyword: wood cultural resources

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Cultural Characteristics of Korean Ectomycorrhizal Fungi (한국산 외생균근균의 배양 특성)

  • Jeon, Sung-Min;Ka, Kang-Hyeon
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
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    • v.43 no.1
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    • pp.1-12
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    • 2015
  • Many ectomycorrhizal fungi provide delicious foods for humans as symbiotic fungi forming ectomycorrhizas on roots of trees. Korea Forest Research Institute (KFRI) is focused on studying the pure culture, conservation, and fundamental characteristics of ectomycorrhizal fungi as well as their artificial cultivation. In this review, we described the cultural characteristics of many ectomycorrhizal fungi that are preserved in the cold room of KFRI. The aim of this article is to provide basic information that will be useful in investigating good forest resources for any researchers who are interested in this topic.

Species and Anatomical Characteristics of Straw Shoes of Baekje Kingdom (백제 짚신의 수종과 해부학적 특징)

  • Park, Won-Kyu;Kim, Kyung-Hee;Kim, Yo-jung
    • 한국문화재보존과학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2004.10a
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    • pp.104-108
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    • 2004
  • Species and anatomical characteristics of twenty-seven straw shoes (around AD 500s-600s) of Baekje Kingdom, excavated at Gwanbukri and Goongnamji relics of Baeje Kingdom, were examined. The shoe tissues were macerated and examined under microscope. They were identified as Typha spp (cattails), not any of straws such as rice. Cattails, a perennial glass, grow in low and swamp places. Cattails are not known as one of major raw materials for straw shoes. The cattail fibers are not as strong as those of rice straws, common raw materials for ancient shows.

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Analysis on deterioration behaviors of the beewax-treated Annals of Joseon Dynasty (「조선왕조실록」 밀납본의 열화특성 분석)

  • Jo, Byoung-muk;Kim, Hyoung-jin;Choi, Tae-ho;Eom, Tae-jin
    • 보존과학연구
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    • s.28
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    • pp.21-37
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    • 2007
  • Paper cultural asset show various deterioration characteristics and behaviors according to the environmental conditions during the storage. The understanding of the paper itself and its conservation knowledge is thus prerequisite to preserve paper cultural assets and pass them to descendants in a good condition. The Annals of Joseon Dynasty is one of the most important our written cultural assets (National treasure No.151) and it is registered as a UNESCO Memory of the World. The Annals of Joseon Dynasty is composed of 1707 volumes and 1,187 books that were written on the official history of 472 years(AD 1392-1863) from King Taejo to King Chuljong (25 generations). Among them, beewax-treated Annals show severe damages due to the deterioration of wax materials such as breaking, hardening, darkening, discoloring and whitening. Urgent measures should be taken to preserve the Annals and prevent further deterioration. Therefore, a systematic and scientific approach on the conservation and restoration of the Annals of Joseon Dynasty is definitely necessary. So it can be used an example to show how much the preservation science can conserve the paper cultural assets. In this respect, this study focuses on analyzing paper properties and deterioration behaviors of the Annals of King Sejong, the most damaged one, using non-destructive micro analysis techniques.

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Analysis of Species and Tree-ring Dating of Coffin Woods excavated at Hopyungri, Namyangju, Korea (남양주 호평유적 출토 관재의 수종식별 및 연륜연대 분석)

  • Park, Won-Kyu;Choi, Jong-Kook;Kim, Yo-Jung
    • Journal of Conservation Science
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    • v.18 s.18
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    • pp.105-110
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    • 2006
  • The purpose of this study is to identify the species and to date the coffin woods that were excavated at a tomb (husband and wife) in Hopyungri, Namyngju, Korea. Twenty-three wood specimens of the two coffins were analyzed for identifying their species. All coffin woods were Pinus spp. (hard pine). 'Sabs'(ritual utensils that prevent demon) were made from Tilia spy. Tree-ring dating proved that the husband's coffin was made from the wood which was cut around 1620 and the wife's one at a little earlier period.

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Analysis of Charred-Woods Excavated from the Daewoongjeon Hall of Youngguksa Temple (영국사 대웅전 출토 탄화목의 재질 분석)

  • Son, Byung Hwa;Park, Won-Kyu
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.35 no.1
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    • pp.36-43
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    • 2007
  • Elemental analysis, SEM-EDX, X-ray diffraction (XRD) and IR analysis were adopted to examine the quality of charred woods excavated from the underground of the Daewoongjeon Hall of Youngguksa Temple, Youngdong-gun, Chungbuk, Korea. A large amount of calcium was detected in SEM-EDX analysis. The analyses of chemical elements suggested that completely charred wood was carbonized at about $500^{\circ}C$. The XRD results indicated the destruction of cellulose crystalline region. The IR analysis exhibited that thermal degradation of wood component was different depending upon the carbonization temperature. It can be suggested from the results that PEG with different molecular weights should be used for the conservation of excavated charred woods.

Water Resistance Evaluation of the Oils Coating for Conservation of Wooden Cultural Heritage (목조문화재 보존을 위한 유지류 코팅제의 방수 성능 평가)

  • Na, Won Ju;Cho, So Yeong;Kim, Do Rae;Chung, Woo Yang
    • Journal of Conservation Science
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    • v.31 no.1
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    • pp.13-20
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    • 2015
  • Surface of the wooden cultural heritage has been protected from moisture by natural oils (such as perilla oil and tung oil), which accelerated degradation. But we can find seldom the research on the processes and performances of oil coatings. In this study, the water resistant performances by wood direction were compared to 3 types of natural oil and 2 types of oil stain, and the effect of additional indoor conditioning and temperature of oil were appraised in longitudinal direction. The natural oils block moisture about 79.2% comparing to the control in longitudinal direction. Especially the tung oil showed the outstanding water resistance about 90.5%. The water resistant performances decreased about 8.8% by additional indoor conditioning for 2 years. Heated oil improved the water resistance about average 5.0%.(Max. 9.6% with linseed oil).

Conservation of Biodiversity and Forest Resources in Nepal -Degradation and Threats-

  • Ghimire, Bimal Kumar;Islam, Mohammad Saiful;Chun, Su-Kyoung
    • Journal of the Korea Furniture Society
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.300-306
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    • 2008
  • Nepal is rich country in terms of its vast array of biological diversity. The relationship between local communities and the biological diversity in Nepal is a very entangle one, whereby two-thirds of our population are heavily dependent upon the biodiversity for their survival. The destruction of biodiversity signifies the destruction of people's livelihoods and survival. Biodiversity and genetic resources conservation has been a most significant part of the Nepalese society due to its socio-economic and cultural importance and provides the human race trees for timber, fuel, food, industrial raw materials, pharmaceuticals, beverages and environmental stabilization. Threats to biodiversity at global level is of greater concern, specially, human activities are the greatest factor currently affecting biodiversity, through the use of natural resources by industry, agriculture, hunting, and energy generation.

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Analysis of Species and Tree-Ring Dating of Wood Elements Used for the Daewoongjeon Hall of Youngguksa Temple (영국사 대웅전 목부재의 수종 및 연륜연대 분석)

  • Son, Byung-Hwa;Park, Won-Kyu;Yoon, Doo-Hyung
    • Journal of architectural history
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.23-38
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    • 2006
  • During the repair and restoration of the Daewoongjeon Hall of Youngguksa Temple, species identification and tree-ring dating for both present wood elements and charred ones excavated under the Hall, were conducted. The species of 74 wood elements of Daewoongjeon Hall, were identified as Pinus densiflora Sieb. et Zucc. and only 1 was identified as exotic Pinus species. The latter wood, which was used in the laths, seems to have been replaced during past repairs. Many documentary records and various artifacts pertaining to Youngguksa Temple are being excavated, but none described precisely the construction date of the present Daewoongjeon Hall. Also, from beneath the Daewoongjeon Hall, cornerstone and foundation of previous building and several charred wood elements were excavated. In comparing the direction of the stone columns of foundation of the previous structure and the existing Daewoongjeon Hall, the previous structure was rotated in an angle of approximately $15^{\circ}$. Therefore, in order to find the association of the previous structure with the present Daewoongjeon Hall, tree-ring dating was conducted. The dating of 41 original timbers and 14 roof-filling timbers of the present construction elements revealed that the last annual ring was of A. D. 1703 with complete latewood, indicating that those woods was cut some time between the autumn of 1703 and spring of 1704, and the building was erected in 1704 when we assume no period of wood storage. The year of the last annual ring of the charred elements, which were excavated from beneath the Daewoongjeon Hall, was analyzed as 1674. The cutting year of the woods used for the present building began in 1698, therefore, it can be presumed that the Daewoongjeon Hall before the fire was a structure that was elected shortly after 1674 and that a catastrophic fire occurred some time between 1674 and 1698.

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Species Identification and Tree-Ring Dating of Coffin Woods Excavated at Ma-Jeon Relic in Jeonju, Korea (전주 마전유적 출토 목관재의 수종식별 및 연륜연대 분석)

  • Park, Won-Kyu;Yoon, Doo-Hyoung;Park, Sue-Hyun
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.34 no.6
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    • pp.12-20
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    • 2006
  • The objectives of this study were to identify the species of coffin woods excavated at Ma-jeon relic in Jeonju and to date this coffin using tree-ring method. Al coffin woods were identified as red pines, most possibly, Pinus densiflora S. et Z. Tree-ring dating provides a calender year to each ring and produces the cutting date, if the bark presents. Due to the presence of bark and complete latewood present, the cutting date of the tree for coffin turned out between A.D. 1637 autumn and 1638 spring. However, due to the seasoning and storage periods, actual coffin manufacturing and burial time may be a little different from the tree-ring date.

Radiocarbon Dating of a Wooden Board from Jeongsusa Temple Using Wiggle Matching of Quinquennial Tree-Ring Samples (5년 간격 연륜의 위글매치를 이용한 정수사 법당 목부재의 방사성탄소연대 측정)

  • Nam, Tae-Kwang;Park, Jung-Hun;Hong, Wan;Park, Won-Kyu
    • Journal of Conservation Science
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.1-5
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    • 2012
  • This paper reports the application of radiocarbon wiggle-matching for Korean wooden artifacts such as buildings and Buddhist statues for precise dating. Nine quinquennial (every five-year) samples of 41 years (AD 1250-1290) for AMS radiocarbon measurements were prepared from a wooden board used for the Main Hall at Jeongsusa (temple) in Kangwhado, Korea, which was dendrochronologically dated. The 95.4% confidence interval of radiocarbon dating prior to wiggle matching was 113.3 year in average. When wiggle-matching technique was applied, it became 20 years, 5.7 times smaller than that produced without wiggle matching. The results indicated that wiggle-matching technique using the calibration curve for northern hemisphere (IntCal04) can produce precise dates for Korean wooden artifacts, at least, for the $13^{th}$ century.