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7.2 Magnitude Huge Earthquake Rocks Japan
by Glenda Kwek via reed - SMH Tuesday, Mar 8 2011, 8:57pm
international / environment / other press

A 7.2-magnitude earthquake that struck off the coast of Japan this afternoon has triggered a small tsunami, but with no reports of damage. The quake hit at 1.54pm about 169 kilometres off the city of Sendai in northern Japan at a depth of 14 kilometres.

tsunami_9.jpg

The Japan Meteorological Agency issued a tsunami warning of up to 50 centimetres for the east coast of the main Honshu island.

A 60-centimetre wave was first reported at Ofunato port half an hour after the quake without causing any damage.

"We have confirmed that small tsunami have come up on the shores, but we have no reports of damage at this point," said Shinobu Nagano, an emergency and disaster response official in Iwate prefecture.

"We are still trying to determine the impact of the quake."

Yoshiyuki Sato, an official at Kurihara City in Miyagi prefecture, about 300 kilometres north-east of Tokyo, told Reuters: "First I felt a jolt that pushed from underneath, then a big sideways tremor that lasted for about 20 seconds.

"The tremor was relatively big but things did not fall off the shelves in the city government building."

Australian James Hodges, who is based in Tokyo and has worked in Japan for two decades, said he was used to experiencing tremors.

"The only difference this time was that the tremor seemed to last a rather long time, without spiking to a greater intensity ... [T]here seem to be no major dramas here in western Tokyo at the moment."

Residents in the rural seaside areas where the quake was felt most strongly reported no immediate damage.

"It continued for about 30 seconds, but I don't see anything that looks different," said Yoshio Hoshi, a retired fisherman in Miyagi prefecture.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said a local tsunami might be generated as a result of the undersea jolt, although "no destructive widespread tsunami threat exists based on historical earthquake and tsunami data".

The Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre said there was no tsunami threat to the Australian mainland, islands or territories.

Daniel Jaksa, senior duty seismologist at Geoscience Australia, said the earthquake would have been felt in Japan, "but it's not likely to cause any great distress".

"7.2 earthquakes are quite common in the northern part of the Honshu. They get one of these every couple of years."

An official at the National Police Agency said there was no information on damage from the quake so far.

Tohoku Electric Power said its Onagawa nuclear plant was operating normally after the quake. Tokyo Electric Power also said there was no impact on its power plants in the region.

Bullet trains resumed running in north-eastern Japan after stopping briefly, Kyodo news agency reported.

Earthquakes are common in Japan, one of the world's most seismically active areas. The country accounts for about 20 per cent of the world's earthquakes of magnitude 6 or greater.

© 2011 Fairfax Media

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Series of aftershocks jolt Japan after strong quake
by staff report via reed - Xinhua China Wednesday, Mar 9 2011, 7:51pm

TOKYO, March 10 (Xinhua) -- A series of aftershocks rattled Japan Thursday after the magnitude 7.3 tremor hit the northeastern Honshu island the previous day, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

A strong aftershock with a preliminary magnitude 6.6 hit northeastern Japan at 6:24 a.m.. There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage from the quake.

The weather agency temporarily issued a tsunami warning for the Pacific coast of adjacent Fukushima Prefecture after the quake but was soon lifted.

East Japan Railway Co. said the quake did not affect Shinkansen bullet trains linking the Tohoku region and Tokyo on Thursday morning, according to local media reports.

The strong aftershock came three hours after a magnitude 6.2 quake and another one measuring 6.1. Wednesday's quake and the early Thursday's aftershocks were all in the same area.

Japan is one of the countries most frequently hit by earthquakes. Around 20 percent of the world's most powerful earthquakes strike Japan.

© 2011 Xinhua News Agency

14 killed, 135 injured as 5.8-magnitude quake hits China-Myanmar [Burma] border
by staff report via fleet - International Business Times Thursday, Mar 10 2011, 6:52am

A 5.8-magnitude earthquake hit Yingjiang County in southwest China's Yunnan Province on Thursday afternoon, killing alt least 14 people and injuring about 135 residents, media reported.

The quake hit the county at 12:58 p.m. (local time) Beijing Time, in which many houses collapsed burying people under debris, county officials told Xinhua news agency.

According to the China Earthquake Networks Center, the epicenter was located in Shiming village, about 2 kilometers away from the county seat. With a depth of 10 kilometers, it was recorded at 24.7 degrees north latitude and 97.9 degrees east longitude. The epicenter was 95 km southeast of Myitkyina in Maynmar, US Geological Survey said.

The southwestern Yunnan province witnessed an earthquake measuring 4.8 on the Richter scale on February 2, with more than 700 homes damaged and 65,000 people forced out of their homes.

In 2008, more than 68,000 people were killed in Sichuan province when the Great Sichuan Earthquake measuring 8.0 magnitude devastated the region.

© 2011 International Business Times.


 
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