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Polystichum tsus-simense, commonly known as the Korean rock fern, is a perennial herbaceous plant native to East Asia. Its common name corresponds with its ability to grow in shady areas of rock walls. This fern species is a familiar ornamental plant grown in home gardens.
Polystichum luctuosum is a species of fern known by the common names Korean rock fern [1] and Tsushima holly fern [citation needed].It is a small, clump-forming, tufted, evergreen to semi-evergreen fern native to Japan, Korea, Taiwan, China, Vietnam, and Thailand, as well as southern Africa.
Iksookimia koreensis (Kim, 1975) – Korean spine loach (참종개) Iksookimia longicorpa (Kim, Choi, et Nalbant, 1976) (왕종개) Iksookimia pumila (Kim et Lee, 1987) – Puan spine loach (부안종개) Iksookimia yongdokensis (Kim et Park, 1997) (동방종개) Kichulchoia brevifasciata (Kim et Lee, 1996) – dwarf loach (좀수수치)
The geology of South Korea includes rocks dating to the Archean and two large massifs of metamorphic rock as the crystalline basement, overlain by thick sedimentary sequences, younger metamorphic rocks and volcanic deposits. [1] Despite the country's small size, its geology is diverse, containing rocks formed during the Precambrian to Cenozoic ...
The Bangudae Petroglyphs (Korean: 반구대 암각화) are pre-historic engravings on flat vertical rock faces.They are on rocks around 8m wide and around 5m high on steep cliffs on the riverside of the Daegokcheon stream, a branch of the Taehwa River, [1] which runs eastward and joins the East Sea at Ulsan.
South Korean senior women divers defy aging stereotypes in Detroit native's film. Gannett. Julie Hinds, Detroit Free Press. October 11, 2024 at 11:03 AM ... “Like most Korean American children ...
Korean artwork shows scholar paying homage to a special stone – painting with calligraphy by Hô Ryôn, 1885. Suseok (Korean: 수석), also called viewing stones or scholar's stones, is the Korean term for rocks resembling natural landscapes. [1] [2] The term also refers to the art of stone appreciation. [1]
Daepo Jusangjeolli Cliff (Korean: 주상절리대; RR: Jusangjeollidae) is a volcanic rock formation at the southern coast of Jeju Island, South Korea. It is named for jusangjeolli, the Korean term for columnar jointing. [1] The cliff was formed when the lava from the island's volcano Hallasan flowed into the sea of Jungmun. The lava formed ...