GONGGIRI SECTION

 

Good trilobite collecting can be had in mudshales of the middle Machari Formation at the Gonggiri section.  The locality is a hillside exposure at a hairpin turn of a narrow mountain “road”.  The sloping forest floor adjacent to the cut also has weathered rock at the surface.  We are walking distance north of the tiny village of Gonggiri & about 2-3 km south of Mt. Sambang & about 15 km north of the city of Yeongwol in northeastern South Korea.

 

The middle Machari Formation at Gonggiri has 115 recognizable units in 53 meters of section.  Agnostoid and polymeroid trilobites are common here.  The Koreans have documented 22 trilobites species from three Late Cambrian trilobite biozones here.

 

GPS of cut: 37° 18.696' North, 128° 26.124' East.

 

 

Above: Cambrian researchers from around the world (Germany, Sweden, America, Taiwan, Korea, Britain) collecting trilobites from the Machari Formation at Gonggiri, South Korea.

 


 

 

Above: Machari Formation mudshales at Gonggiri.  Person at right is Sung Kwun Chough, a geology professor from Seoul National University (SNU).  Chough is probably the world's top expert on the regional geology of Korea.

 


 

 

Above: View from the Gonggiri section, looking south.  The village of

Gonggiri is hidden behind the trees in the valley at center.

 


 

 

Above: James St. John at the Gonggiri section in South Korea.  The smile is sincere because he's just found several decent trilobite fossils.

 


 

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