A Korean acupuncturist inserting a needle into the leg of a male patient. Wellcome Collection
Traditional Korean medicine are medical practices that originated and developed in Korea.
History
Korean
medicine traditions originated in ancient and prehistoric times and can
be traced back as far as 3000 B.C. when stone and bone needles were
found in North Hamgyong Province, in present-day North Korea. In Gojoseon, where the founding myth of Korea is recorded, there is a story of a tiger and a bear who wanted to reincarnate in human form and who ate wormwood and garlic. In Jewang Ungi (제왕운기), which was written around the time of Samguk Yusa,
wormwood and garlic are described as 'edible medicine', showing that,
even in times when incantatory medicine was the mainstream, medicinal
herbs were given as curatives in Korea. Medicinal herbs at this time
were used as remedial treatment such as easing the pain or tending
injury, along with knowing what foods were good for health. Moreover,
wormwood and garlic are not found in ancient Chinese herbology, showing
that traditional Korean medicine developed unique practices and
inherited them from other cultures.
In the period of the Three Kingdoms, traditional Korean medicine was mainly influenced by other traditional medicines such as ancient Chinese medicine. In the Goryeo
dynasty, a more intense investigation of domestic herbs took place: The
result was the publication of numerous books on domestic herbs. Medical
theories at this time were based on the medicine of Song dynasty, but prescriptions were based on the medicine of the Unified Silla period such as the medical text First Aid Prescriptions Using Native Ingredients or Hyangyak Gugeupbang (향약구급방), which was published in 1236. Other medical journals were published during this period like Introductory Guide to Medicine for the General Public or Jejungiphyobang (제중입효방).
Medicine flourished in the period of the Joseon. For example, the first training system of nurses was instituted under King Taejong (1400-1418), while under the reign of King Sejong the Great (1418-1450) measures were adopted to promote the development of a variety of Korean medicinal ingredients.
These efforts were systematized and published in the Hyangyak
Jipseongbang (향약집성방, 1433), which was completed and included 703 Korean
native medicines, providing an impetus to break away from dependence on
Chinese medicine. The medical encyclopaedia named Classified Collection of Medical Prescriptions
(醫方類聚, 의방유취), which included many classics from traditional chinese
medicine, written by Kim Ye-mong (金禮蒙, 김예몽) and other Korean official
doctors from 1443 to 1445, was regarded as one of the greatest medical
texts of the 15th century. It included more than 50,000 prescriptions and incorporated 153 different Korean and Chinese texts, including the Concise Prescriptions of Royal Doctors (御醫撮要方, 어의촬요방) which was written by Choi Chong-jun (崔宗峻, 최종준) in 1226. Classified Collection of Medical Prescriptions
has very important research value, because it keeps the contents of
many ancient Korean and Chinese medical books that had been lost for a
long time.
After this, many books on medical specialties were published. There are three physicians from the Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910) who are generally credited with further development of traditional Korean medicine—Heo Jun, Saam, and Lee Je-ma. After the Japanese invasion in 1592, Dongeui Bogam (동의보감) was written by Heo Jun,
the first of the major physicians. This work further integrated the
Korean and Chinese medicine of its time and was influential to Chinese,
Japanese and Vietnamese medicine.
The next major influence to traditional Korean medicine is related to Sasang typology (사상의학). Lee Je-ma and his book, The Principal of Life Preservation in Oriental Medicine (東醫壽世保元, 동의수세보원) systematically theorized with the influence of Korean Confucianism and his clinical experiences in Korea. Lee Je-ma
said that even if patients suffer the same illness, patients need to
use different herbal applications to treat the same illness due to the
pathophysiologies of individuals. He stresses that the health of human
body had a close relationship with the state of mind. He believed that
the human mind and body were not separate and they closely reflected
each other, and the aspect of mind needed to be considered when
examining the causes of disease. Thus, not only food and natural
environment but also emotional changes in humans can be another major
reason for illness. He believed that medical diagnosis and treatment
should be based on person's typology rather than on symptoms alone and
each person should be given different prescriptions depending on the
constitution of the individual. Sasang typology
(사상의학) focuses on the individual patients based on different reactions
to disease and herbs. Treat illness by the treatment of the root cause
through proper diagnosis. Key to this diagnosis is to first determine
the internal organs or pathophysiology of each patient.
The next recognized individual is Saam, a priest-physician who is
believed to have lived during the 16th century. Although there is much
unknown about Saam, including his real name and date of birth, it is
recorded that he studied under the famous monk Samyang. He developed a
system of acupuncture that employs the five element theory.
In the late Joseon dynasty, positivism was widespread. Clinical
evidence was used more commonly as the basis for studying disease and
developing cures. Scholars who had turned away from politics devoted
themselves to treating diseases and, in consequence, new schools of
traditional medicine were established. Simple books on medicine for the
common people were published.
Lee Je-ma
classified human beings into four main types, based on the emotion that
dominated their personality and developed treatments for each type:
Doctor's office in folk village in pre-modern Korea.
Herbalism
is the study and practice of using plant material for the purpose of
food, medicine, or health. They may be flowers, plants, shrubs, trees,
moss, lichen, fern, algae, seaweed or fungus. The plant may be used in
its entirety or with only specific parts. In each culture or medical
system there are different types of herbal practitioners: professional
and lay herbalists, plant gatherers, and medicine makers.
Herbal medicines may be presented in many forms including fresh,
dried, whole, or chopped. Herbs may be prepared as infusions when an
herb is soaked in a liquid or decocted—simmered in water over low heat
for a certain period. Some examples of infusion are chamomile or
peppermint, using flowers, leaves and powdered herbs. Decocting examples
may be rose hips, cinnamon
bark, and licorice root consisting of fruits, seeds, barks, and roots.
Fresh and dried herbs can be tinctured where herbs are kept in alcohol
or contained in a vinegar extract. They can be preserved as syrups such
as glycerites in vegetable glycerin or put in honey known as miels.
Powdered and freeze dried herbs can be found in bulk, tablets, troches
similar to a lozenge, pastes, and capsules.
Many herbalists consider the patient's direct involvement to be
critical. These methods are delivered differently depending on the
herbal traditions of each area. Nature is not necessarily safe; special
attention should be used when grading quality, deciding a dosage,
realizing possible effects, and any interactions with herbal
medications.
An example of herbal medicine is the use of medicinal mushrooms as a food and as a tea. A notable mushroom used in traditional Korean medicine is Phellinus linteus known as Song-gen.
Acupuncture
Acupuncture
is used to withdraw blood or stimulate certain points on humans and
animals by inserting them on specific pressure points of the body.
Traditional acupuncture involves the belief that a "life force" (qi) circulates within the body in lines called meridians. Scientific investigation has not found any histological or physiological evidence for traditional Chinese concepts such as qi, meridians, and acupuncture points, and many modern practitioners no longer support the existence of life force energy (qi) flowing through meridians, which was a major part of early belief systems.
Pressure points can be stimulated through a mixture of methods ranging
from the insertion and withdrawal of very small needles to the use of
heat, known as moxibustion. Pressure points can also be stimulated by laser, massage, and electrical means.
Moxibustion
Moxibustion
is a technique in which heat is applied to the body with a stick or a
cone of burning mugwort. The tool is placed over the affected area
without burning the skin. The cone or stick can also be placed over a
pressure point to stimulate and strengthen the blood.
The South Korean government
established a national school of traditional Korean medicine to
establish its national treasure on a solid basis after the closing of
the first modern educational facility (Dong-Je medical school) one
hundred years ago by the Japanese invasion.
In 2008, the School of Korean Medicine was established inside Pusan National University
with the 50 undergraduate students on the Yangsan medical campus. The
new affiliated Korean Medical Hospital and Research Center for Clinical
Studies are under construction.
Compared with common private traditional medicine undergraduate schools (6 years), this is a special graduate school (4+4).
Human habitation of the area started about 8,000 years ago with small family groups of Native Americans, one of which was the semi-nomadic BasketmakerAnasazi (c. 300 CE). Subsequently, the Virgin Anasazi culture (c. 500) and the Parowan Fremont group developed as the Basketmakers settled in permanent communities. Both groups moved away by 1300 and were replaced by the Parrusits and several other Southern Paiute subtribes. Mormons came into the area in 1858 and settled there in the early 1860s. In 1909, President William Howard Taft named the area Mukuntuweap National Monument in order to protect the canyon. In 1918, the acting director of the newly created National Park Service, Horace Albright, drafted a proposal to enlarge the existing monument and change the park's name to Zion National Monument, Zion being a term used by the Mormons. According to historian Hal Rothman:
"The name change played to a prevalent bias of the time. Many believed
that Spanish and Indian names would deter visitors who, if they could
not pronounce the name of a place, might not bother to visit it. The new
name, Zion, had greater appeal to an ethnocentric audience." On November 19, 1919, Congress redesignated the monument as Zion National Park, and the act was signed by President Woodrow Wilson.
The Kolob section was proclaimed a separate Zion National Monument in
1937, but was incorporated into the national park in 1956.
The geology of the Zion and Kolob canyons area includes nine formations that together represent 150 million years of mostly Mesozoic-aged sedimentation.
At various periods in that time warm, shallow seas, streams, ponds and
lakes, vast deserts, and dry near-shore environments covered the area.
Uplift associated with the creation of the Colorado Plateau lifted the region 10,000 feet (3,000 m) starting 13 million years ago.
The 8,726-foot (2,660 m) summit of Horse Ranch Mountain
is the highest point in the park; the lowest point is the 3,666-foot
(1,117 m) elevation of Coal Pits Wash, creating a relief of about 5,100
feet (1,600 m).
Streams in the area take rectangular paths because they follow jointing planes in the rocks. The stream gradient of the Virgin River,
whose North Fork flows through Zion Canyon in the park, ranges from 50
to 80 feet per mile (9.5 to 15.2 m/km) (0.9–1.5%)—one of the steepest
stream gradients in North America.
Towers of the Virgin
The road into Zion Canyon is 6 miles (9.7 km) long, ending at the Temple of Sinawava, which is named for the coyote god of the Paiute Indians. The canyon becomes more narrow near the Temple and a hiking trail continues to the mouth of The Narrows, a gorge only 20 feet (6 m) wide and up to 2,000 feet (610 m) tall.
The Zion Canyon road is served by a free shuttle bus from early April
to late October and by private vehicles the other months of the year.
Other roads in Zion are open to private vehicles year-round.
The east side of the park is served by Zion-Mount Carmel Highway (SR-9), which passes through the Zion–Mount Carmel Tunnel and ends at Mount Carmel. On the east side of the park, notable park features include Checkerboard Mesa and the East Temple.
Spring weather is unpredictable, with stormy, wet days being common, mixed with occasional warm, sunny weather. Precipitation is normally heaviest in March. Spring wildflowers
bloom from April through June, peaking in May. Fall days are usually
clear and mild; nights are often cool. Summer days are hot (95 to
110 °F; 35 to 43 °C), but overnight lows are usually comfortable (65 to
70 °F; 18 to 21 °C). Afternoon thunderstorms are common from mid-July through mid-September. Storms may produce waterfalls as well as flash floods.
Autumn tree-color displays begin in September in the high country; in
Zion Canyon, autumn colors usually peak in late October. Winter in Zion
Canyon is fairly mild. Winter storms bring rain or light snow to Zion
Canyon and heavier snow to the higher elevations. Clear days may become
quite warm, reaching 60 °F (16 °C); nights are often 20 to 40 °F (−7 to
4 °C).
Winter storms can last several days and make roads icy. Zion roads are
plowed, except the Kolob Terrace Road which is closed when covered with
snow. Winter driving conditions last from November through March.
Climate
Zion National Park has a BWk (Köppen climate classification)
cold desert type of climate consisting of hot summers and cold winters
with a limited amount of precipitation throughout the year.[19]
Archaeologists
have divided the long span of Zion's human history into three cultural
periods: the Archaic, Protohistoric and Historic periods. Each period is
characterized by distinctive technological and social adaptations.
Archaic period
The first human presence in the region dates to 8,000 years ago when family groups camped where they could hunt or collect plants and seeds. About 2,000 years ago, some groups began growing corn and other crops, leading to an increasingly sedentary lifestyle. Later groups in this period built permanent villages called pueblos. Archaeologists call this the Archaic period and it lasted until c. 500. Baskets, cordage nets, and yucca
fiber sandals have been found and dated to this period. The Archaic
toolkits included flaked stone knives, drills, and stemmed dart points.
The dart points were attached to wooden shafts and propelled by throwing
devices called atlatls.
By c. 300, some of the archaic groups developed into an early branch of seminomadic Anasazi, the Basketmakers. Basketmaker sites have grass- or stone-lined storage cists and shallow, partially underground dwellings called pithouses. They were hunters and gatherers who supplemented their diet with limited agriculture. Locally collected pine nuts were important for food and trade.
Both the Virgin Anasazi and the Parowan Fremont disappear from the archaeological record of southwestern Utah by c. 1300.
Extended droughts in the 11th and 12th centuries, interspersed with
catastrophic flooding, may have made horticulture impossible in this
arid region.
Tradition and archaeological evidence hold that their replacements were Numic-speaking cousins of the Virgin Anasazi, such as the Southern Paiute and Ute. The newcomers migrated on a seasonal basis up and down valleys in search of wild seeds and game animals. Some, particularly the Southern Paiute, also planted fields of corn, sunflowers, and squash to supplement their diet. These more sedentary groups made brownware vessels that were used for storage and cooking.
Exploration and settlement by Euro-Americans
The Historic period begins in the late 18th century with the exploration of southern Utah by Padres Silvestre Vélez de Escalante and Francisco Atanasio Domínguez.
The padres passed near what is now the Kolob Canyons Visitor Center on
October 13, 1776, becoming the first people of European descent known to
visit the area. In 1825, trapper and trader Jedediah Smith explored some of the downstream areas while under contract with the American Fur Company.
In 1847, Mormon farmers from the Salt Lake area became the first people of European descent to settle the Virgin River region. In 1851, the Parowan and Cedar City areas were settled by Mormons who used the Kolob Canyons area for timber, and for grazing cattle, sheep, and horses. They prospected for mineral deposits, and diverted Kolob water to irrigate crops in the valley below. Mormon settlers named the area Kolob—in Mormon scripture, the heavenly place nearest the residence of God.
Settlements had expanded 30 miles (48 km) south to the lower Virgin River by 1858.
That year, a Southern Paiute guide led young Mormon missionary and
interpreter Nephi Johnson into the upper Virgin River area and Zion
Canyon.
Johnson wrote a favorable report about the agricultural potential of
the upper Virgin River basin, and returned later that year to found the
town of Virgin. In 1861 or 1862, Joseph Black made the arduous journey
to Zion Canyon and was very impressed by its beauty.
The floor of Zion Canyon was settled in 1863 by Isaac Behunin, who farmed corn, tobacco, and fruit trees. The Behunin family lived in Zion Canyon near the site of today's Zion Lodge
during the summer, and wintered in Springdale. Behunin is credited with
naming Zion, a reference to the place of peace mentioned in the Bible.
Two more families settled Zion Canyon in the next couple of years,
bringing with them cattle and other domesticated animals. The canyon
floor was farmed until Zion became a Monument in 1909.
The Powell Geographic Expedition of 1869 entered the area after their first trip through the Grand Canyon. John Wesley Powell visited Zion Canyon in 1872 and named it Mukuntuweap, under the impression that that was the Paiute name. Powell Survey photographers John K. Hillers and James Fennemore first visited the Zion Canyon and Kolob Plateau region in the spring of 1872. Hillers returned in April 1873 to add more photographs to the "Virgin River Series" of photographs and stereographs. Hillers described wading the canyon for four days and nearly freezing to death to take his photographs.
Paintings of the canyon by Frederick S. Dellenbaugh were exhibited at the Saint Louis World's Fair in 1904, followed by a favorable article in Scribner's Magazine the next year. The article and paintings, along with previously created photographs, paintings, and reports, led to President William Howard Taft's proclamation on July 31, 1909 that created Mukuntuweap National Monument. In 1917, the acting director of the newly created National Park Service
visited the canyon and proposed changing its name from the locally
unpopular Mukuntuweap to Zion, a name used by the local Mormon
community. The United States Congress added more land and established Zion National Park on November 19, 1919.
A separate Zion National Monument, the Kolob Canyons area, was
proclaimed on January 22, 1937, and was incorporated into the park on
July 11, 1956.
Travel to the area before it was a national park was rare due to
its remote location, lack of accommodations, and the absence of real
roads in southern Utah. Old wagon roads were upgraded to the first
automobile roads starting about 1910, and the road into Zion Canyon was
built in 1917 leading to the Grotto, short of the present road that now
ends at the Temple of Sinawava.
1938 poster of Zion National Park
Touring cars could reach Zion Canyon by the summer of 1917. The first visitor lodging in Zion Canyon, called Wylie Camp, was established that same year as a tent camp. The Utah Parks Company, a subsidiary of the Union Pacific Railroad, acquired Wylie Camp in 1923, and offered ten-day rail/bus tours to Zion, nearby Bryce Canyon, the Kaibab Plateau, and the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. The Zion Lodge complex was built in 1925 at the site of the Wylie tent camp. Architect Gilbert Stanley Underwood designed the Zion Lodge in a rustic architectural style, while the Utah Parks Company funded the construction.
Infrastructure improvements
Work on the Zion Mount Carmel Highway started in 1927 to enable
reliable access between Springdale and the east side of the park. The road opened in 1930 and park visit and travel in the area greatly increased. The most famous feature of the Zion – Mount Carmel Highway is its 1.1-mile (1.8 km) tunnel, which has six large windows cut through the massive sandstone cliff.
In 1896, local rancher John Winder improved the Native American footpath up Echo Canyon, which later became the East Rim Trail.
Entrepreneur David Flanigan used this trail in 1900 to build cableworks
that lowered lumber into Zion Canyon from Cable Mountain. More than
200,000 board feet (470 m3) of lumber were lowered by 1906. The auto road was extended to the Temple of Sinawava, and a trail built from there 1 mile (1.6 km) to the start of the Narrows. Angel's Landing Trail was constructed in 1926 and two suspension bridges were built over the Virgin River. Other trails were constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps during the 1930s.
More recent history
The Altar of Sacrifice (center) with reddish, blood-like streaks
Zion Canyon Scenic Drive
provides access to Zion Canyon. Traffic congestion in the narrow canyon
was recognized as a major problem in the 1990s and a public
transportation system using propane-powered shuttle buses was instituted
in the year 2000. As part of its shuttle fleet, Zion has two electric trams each holding up to 36 passengers.
Usually from early April through late October, the scenic drive in Zion
Canyon is closed to private vehicles and visitors ride the shuttle
buses. The National Park Service has contracted the management of the shuttle bus system to transit operator RATP Dev.
Zion shuttle bus stops are marked with numbers
On April 12, 1995, heavy rains triggered a landslide that blocked the Virgin River in Zion Canyon.
Over a period of two hours, the river carved away part of the only
exit road from the canyon, trapping 450 guests and employees at the Zion
Lodge. A one-lane, temporary road was constructed within 24 hours to allow evacuation of the Lodge. A more stable — albeit temporary — road was completed on May 25, 1995 to allow summer visitors to access the canyon. This road was replaced with a permanent road during the first half of 1996.
The Zion–Mount Carmel Highway can be travelled year-round. Access
for oversized vehicles requires a special permit, and is limited to
daytime hours, as traffic through the tunnel must be one way to
accommodate large vehicles. The 5-mile (8.0 km)-long Kolob Canyons Road
was built to provide access to the Kolob Canyons section of the park. This road often closes in the winter.
In September 2015, flooding trapped a party of seven in Keyhole Canyon, a slot canyon in the park. The flash flood killed all seven members of the group, whose remains were located after a search lasting several days.
On March 25, 2020, the park campgrounds were closed to help prevent the spread of COVID-19.
Geology
The Three Patriarchs in Zion Canyon are made of Navajo Sandstone
The nine known exposed geologic formations in Zion National Park are part of a super-sequence of rock units called the Grand Staircase. Together, these formations represent about 150 million years of mostly Mesozoic-aged sedimentation in that part of North America. The formations exposed in the Zion area were deposited as sediment in very different environments:
The dry near-shore environment of the Carmel Formation.
The Kolob Canyons are a set of finger canyons cut into the Kolob Plateau
Uplift affected the entire region, known as the Colorado Plateaus, by slowly raising these formations more than 10,000 feet (3,000 m) higher than where they were deposited. This steepened the stream gradient of the ancestral Virgin and other rivers on the plateau.
The faster-moving streams took advantage of uplift-created joints in the rocks. Eventually, all Cenozoic-aged
formations were removed and gorges were cut into the plateaus. Zion
Canyon was cut by the North Fork of the Virgin River in this way. During
the later part of this process, lava flows and cinder cones covered parts of the area.
High water volume in wet seasons does most of the downcutting in the main canyon. These flood events are responsible for transporting most of the 3 million short tons (2.7 million metric tons) of rock and sediment that the Virgin River transports yearly. The Virgin cuts away its canyon faster than its tributaries can cut away their own streambeds, so tributaries end in waterfalls from hanging valleys where they meet the Virgin. The valley between the peaks of the Twin Brothers is a notable example of a hanging valley in the canyon.
Boxelder, Fremont cottonwood, maple, and willow dominate riparian plant communities. Animals such as bank beavers, flannel-mouth suckers, gnatcatchers, dippers, canyon wrens, the virgin spinedace, and water striders all make their homes in the riparian zones.
Activities
Guided horseback riding trips, nature walks, and evening programs are available from late March to early November. The Junior Ranger Program for ages 6–12 is active from Memorial Day to Labor Day at the Zion Nature Center.
Rangers at the visitor centers in Zion Canyon and Kolob Canyons can
help visitors plan their stay. A bookstore attached to the Zion Canyon
visitor center offers books, maps, and souvenirs. The Grotto in Zion Canyon, the visitor center, and the viewpoint at the end of Kolob Canyons Road have the only designated picnic sites.
The Subway, a slot canyon within the Kolob Terrace section
Trails
Seven trails with round-trip times of half an hour (Weeping Rock) to 4 hours (Angels Landing) are found in Zion Canyon. Two popular trails, Taylor Creek (4 hours round trip) and Kolob Arch (8 hours round trip), are in the Kolob Canyons section of the park, near Cedar City. Hiking up into The Narrows
from the Temple of Sinawava is popular in summer; however, hiking
beyond Big Springs requires a permit. The entire Narrows from
Chamberlain's Ranch is a 16-mile one way trip that typically takes 12
hours of strenuous hiking.
A shorter alternative is to enter the Narrows via Orderville Canyon.
Both Orderville and the full Narrows require a back country permit.
Entrance to the Parunuweap Canyon section of the park downstream of
Labyrinth Falls is prohibited. Other often-used backcountry trails
include the West Rim and LaVerkin Creek. The more primitive sections of Zion include the Kolob Terrace and the Kolob Canyons.
A network of trails totaling 50 miles in distance connect Zion's
northwest corner of the park (Lee Pass Trailhead) to its southeast
section (East Rim Trailhead). Popularly known as the Zion Traverse, the
route offers backpackers a diverse experience of the park.
Zion is a center for rock climbing,
with short walls like Spaceshot, Moonlight Buttress, Prodigal Son,
Ashtar Command, and Touchstone being the most popular, highly rated
routes.
Lodging in the park is available at Zion Lodge, located halfway through Zion Canyon. Three campgrounds
are available: South and Watchman at the far southern side of the park,
and a primitive site at Lava Point in the middle of the park off Kolob
Terrace Road. Overnight camping in the backcountry requires permits.