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Andong Railway Station during the Manchukuo period Map of Dandong and Sinuiju in the 1930s Map of Dandong (An-tung) and Sinuiju. Maps and artifacts suggest that the area has been settled since the Gojoseon kingdom period. During the Han dynasty (221 BC–220 AD), the Dandong region was under the jurisdiction of west Anping county. [9]
A park near the Sino-Korean Friendship Bridge A large square in the center of Sinŭiju in August 2012, with a statue of Kim Il Sung Map of Sinŭiju and Dandong (An-tung) Sinŭiju is bordered by the Amnok River , and by P'ihyŏn and Ryongch'ŏn counties .
The China–North Korea border [a] is an international border separating China and North Korea, extending from Korea Bay in the west to a tripoint with Russia in the east. The total length of the border is 1,352 kilometers (840 mi). [1] The current border was created by two secret treaties signed between China and North Korea in 1962 and 1964.
Google has officially revised its Google Maps application to include North Korea, an area once displayed as blank space. The company has said it was able to do so via crowdsourcing, thanks to ...
North Korea Uncovered is a comprehensive set of mappings of North Korea.It includes in-depth coverage of thousands of buildings, monuments, missile-storage facilities, mass graves, secret labor camps, palaces, restaurants, tourist sites, and main roads of the country, and even includes the entrance to the country's subterranean nuclear test base, the Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific Research Center.
The Sino-Korean Friendship Bridge, or China–North Korea Friendship Bridge, is a bridge across the Yalu or Amnok River on the China–North Korea border. It connects the cities of Dandong in China and Sinuiju of North Korea, by railway and roadway but pedestrians are not allowed to cross between either side. The bridge serves as one of the few ...
The New Yalu River Bridge under construction. The Chinese side on the left and the North Korean side on the far right, in early June 2012. The New Yalu River Bridge (Chinese: 新鸭绿江大桥), or Korea-China Amnok River Bridge (Korean: 조중압록강다리), is a road bridge across the Amnok River between Dandong, Liaoning Province, China, and Sinuiju, North Korea.
In December 2012, the Google Maps application was separately made available in the App Store, after Apple removed it from its default installation of the mobile operating system version iOS 6 in September 2012. [29] On January 29, 2013, Google Maps was updated to include a map of North Korea. [30]