The demilitarized zone (DMZ) between North and South Korea is currently no place for people – which is exactly why, 70 years after the Korean War armistice, rare flora and fauna have flourished on the untouched strip of land.

To mark the 70th anniversary of the end of active hostilities between North and South Korea, newly released images show a wildlife haven in the 160-mile-long (257 kilometers) buffer zone between the two countries surrounded by fences and landmines.

Released by Google Arts & Culture and several South Korea-based institutions, the striking images show high-level biodiversity in a 560-square-mile stretch of land that has remained undisturbed for several decades.

"After the Korean War, the DMZ had minimal human interference for over 70 years, and the damaged nature recovered on its own," the site said. "As a result, it built up a new ecosystem not seen around the cities and has become a sanctuary for wildlife."

The project also allows viewers to take a "virtual tour" of historical sites from the war and artwork based on people's experiences in the region.

Yellow-throated marten (Martes flavigula). (National Institute of Ecology/Google Arts & Culture)

The DMZ is home to plants and animals "completely unique to Korea" – 38 percent of which are endangered, Google said on the project site.

Unmanned cameras installed by the National Institute of Ecology show endangered cranes, musk deer, bears, and mountain goats, as well as otters that "move freely along the river" between the two countries, all among a wide range of habitats, including snowy mountains, wetlands, and forests.

These cameras also captured an Asiatic black bear for the first time in 20 years, researchers said, a species in rapid decline due to habitat destruction and poaching.

Long-tailed goral. (National Institute of Ecology/Google Arts & Culture)

In all, 6,168 wildlife species of plants, mammals, birds, amphibians and reptiles, freshwater fish, benthic macroinvertebrates, and spiders live on the land.

Environmental organizations and researchers continue to call for established environmental protection for the DMZ, but the process would require a collaboration between the two countries, according to CNN.

While peace talks in 2018 gave some hope for this possibility, the war between the two countries has not formally ended because the conflict concluded in an armistice rather than a peace treaty in 1953.

This article was originally published by Business Insider.

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