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List of earthquakes in Japan


List of earthquakes in Japan


This is a list of earthquakes in Japan with either a magnitude greater than or equal to 7.0 or which caused significant damage or casualties. As indicated below, magnitude is measured on the Richter magnitude scale (ML) or the moment magnitude scale (Mw), or the surface wave magnitude scale (Ms) for very old earthquakes. The present list is not exhaustive, and furthermore reliable and precise magnitude data is scarce for earthquakes that occurred before the development of modern measuring instruments.

History

Although there is mention of an earthquake in Yamato in what is now Nara Prefecture on August 23, 416, the first earthquake to be reliably documented took place in Nara prefecture on May 28, 599 during the reign of Empress Suiko, destroying buildings throughout Yamato province. Many historical records of Japanese earthquakes exist. The Imperial Earthquake Investigation Committee was created in 1892 to conduct a systematic collation of the available historical data, published in 1899 as the Catalogue of Historical Data on Japanese Earthquakes.

Following the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, the Imperial Earthquake Investigation Committee was superseded by the Earthquake Research Institute in 1925. In modern times, the catalogues compiled by Tatsuo Usami are considered to provide the most authoritative source of information on historic earthquakes, with the 2003 edition detailing 486 that took place between 416 and 1888.

Earthquake measurement

In Japan, the Shindo scale is commonly used to measure earthquakes by seismic intensity instead of magnitude. This is similar to the Modified Mercalli intensity scale used in the United States or the Liedu scale used in China, meaning that the scale measures the intensity of an earthquake at a given location instead of measuring the energy an earthquake releases at its epicenter (its magnitude) as the Richter scale does.

Unlike other seismic intensity scales, which normally have twelve levels of intensity, shindo (震度, seismic intensity, literally "degree of shaking") as used by the Japan Meteorological Agency is a unit with ten levels, ranging from shindo zero, a very light tremor, to shindo seven, a severe earthquake. Intermediate levels for earthquakes with shindo five and six are "weak" or "strong", according to the degree of destruction they cause. Earthquakes measured at shindo four and lower are considered to be weak to mild, while those measured at five and above can cause heavy damage to furniture, wall tiles, wooden houses, reinforced concrete buildings, roads, gas and water pipes.

List

Strongest earthquakes by prefecture (since 1900)

See also

  • Category: Japanese seismologists
  • Coordinating Committee for Earthquake Prediction
  • Geology of Japan
  • Japan Meteorological Agency
  • Japan Meteorological Agency seismic intensity scale
  • List of disasters in Japan by death toll
  • List of volcanoes in Japan
  • Nuclear power in Japan § Seismicity
    • Kantō earthquakes
    • Nankai megathrust earthquakes
    • Seismicity of the Sanriku coast
    • Tōkai earthquakes
    • Tōnankai earthquakes

References

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Further reading

  • Japan: large-scale floods and earthquakes. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. 2009. ISBN 978-92-64-05639-8.
  • Alex K. Tang; Anshel J. Schiff (2010). Kashiwazaki, Japan, Earthquake of July 16, 2007. American Society of Civil Engineers. ISBN 978-0-7844-1062-2.

External links

  • Disaster Preparedness in Japan (bilingual booklet, 3-2015 PDF from Government of Japan Cabinet Office, Director General for Disaster Management)
  • Earthquakes in Japan Since 1900 | Tableau Public
  • Japanese disasters interactive map from 416 CE to 2013 (labels in Japanese)
  • One Week of Japanese Earthquakes | Tableau Public
  • Media related to Earthquakes in Japan at Wikimedia Commons

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: List of earthquakes in Japan by Wikipedia (Historical)