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Showing posts with label tsunami. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tsunami. Show all posts

Sunday, February 28, 2010

JAPAN: Japan Breathes Sigh of Relief as Tsunami Passes

Published: February 28, 2010

By MARTIN FACKLER

TOKYO — More than half a million people in Japan were ordered to higher ground on Sunday, as coastal areas across the vast Pacific region braced for lethal tsunami waves. But only small waves appeared, with only Japan reporting some minor damage.

In coastal areas from Australia to the Russian Far East to Hawaii, officials evacuated residents and issued warnings to be on the look out for large waves following the 8.8 magnitude earthquake that devastated parts of Chile on Saturday. The Asia-Pacific region waited in suspense for almost 24 hours, the time that scientists predicted it would take shock waves from the powerful earthquake to race across the ocean in the form of massive waves.

But the predicted time of impact came and went, with waves of only about four inches reported near Tokyo and of up to about four feet farther north along the Japanese coast. The only reported damage was a few partially flooded homes, warehouses and vehicles in the nation’s north.

As of Sunday afternoon, there were no other reports of injuries, or of property damage elsewhere in the region, causing officials to breathe an almost audible sigh of relief.

“Luckily, these waves are far smaller than the agency’s forecast,” said Kazuaki Ito, director of the Information Institute of Disaster Prevention, a Tokyo-based nonprofit group that advises on natural disasters.

Still, most nations left their alerts in place for much of Sunday in case of additional tsunamis triggered by the huge Chilean temblor. The threat was taken seriously in a region where memories remain raw of the deadly December 2004 tsunami in the neighboring Indian Ocean that killed nearly 230,000 people in 14 countries. Some of the biggest preparations were taken by Japan, where meteorological agency officials issued the nation’s first major tsunami warning in 17 years. They initially said they expected walls of water up to nine feet high.

In Tokyo, commuter trains lines and highways along the edge of Tokyo Bay were stopped for hours. Farther north, officials said they ordered the evacuation of some 570,000 households from coastal areas across Japan. Many of those evacuated were on the northern part of the main Japanese island of Honshu, the same area where in 1960 tsunamis caused by a similarly large earthquake in Chile left some 142 people dead or missing.

On Sunday, Japanese television showed elderly residents in Iwate prefecture sitting on blankets in school gyms that had been turned into makeshift shelters. In the hilly port city of Hakodate, on the northernmost island of Hokkaido, residents sat on hilltops for hours on Sunday watching the sea.

One television program showed fishermen in the northern prefecture of Iwate wrapping their nets into tidy piles ahead of the wave’s expected arrival.

The prime minister’s office, which began preparing an emergency response early Sunday morning, said there were no reports of damage, but said it remained on standby just in case.

“We are preparing to respond to requests for emergency supplies at any time,” Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama told reporters.

In the Philippines, officials advised coastal residents to move inland and told boats to return to shore as the nation braced for waves of at least three feet. Vessels that were farther out to sea were advised to stay in deeper waters, where passing tsunamis only raise water levels by a few inches. The waves do not build to more destructive heights until they reach shallower waters.

Bellaflor Angara Castillo, governor of the northern province of Aurora, said in a radio interview early Sunday that mayors in her province had readied evacuation centers and positioned vehicles to aid in relocating residents.

“We cannot lower our guard,” Renato Solidum, director of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, told the Philippine Daily Inquirer on Saturday. He said an earthquake in Chile in 1960 sent 20-foot tsunamis to the Philippines within 24 hours.

In Russia, dozens of people were told to leave their homes for higher ground in the Kuril islands, a remote chain stretching north from Japan. The waves that hit the Kuril Islands were about 2.5 feet high, but no damage or injuries were reported and the tsunami watch was lifted. Sydney’s Manly Beach was briefly evacuated Sunday morning, but hundreds of local residents showed up anyway to watch for waves. Dozens of surfers defied the warnings by paddling out in hopes of riding one of the tsunamis, if they came. After a few slightly large waves came ashore, everything soon resumed to normal.

The tsunami warning was lifted in Hawaii late Saturday after waves of about five feet were sighted, without any apparent damage. Beaches were briefly cleared of swimmers, and tourists were sent to upper floors of hotels.

In Japan, it was only the fourth time in 52 years that the national meteorological agency issued a warning for a major tsunami, extending along the nation’s Pacific coast from the northern island of Hokkaido as far south as parts of Tokyo.

Japan has a long history of such waves — the word tsunami itself is Japanese — and the nation has extensive defenses in coastal areas, including concrete sea walls and fortified towers where fleeing residents can stay safe above the angry waters.

Reporting was contributed by Carlos H. Conde from Manila, Makiko Inoue from Sayama, Japan, and Meraiah Foley from Sydney, Australia.

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Saturday, February 27, 2010

JAPAN: Thousands begin evacuating in Japan as threat of tsunami nears

February 28, 2010 12:05 a.m. EST

Japan evacuates coast, fear tsunami

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Japan preps for waves that could reach 9 feet high
  • Tsunami warnings lifted for most of the Pacific Rim
  • Pacific Tsunami Warning Center earlier canceled warning for Hawaii
  • The warning for Japan primarily affects fishing areas and tourist areas

Tokyo, Japan (CNN) -- Tens of thousands of residents began evacuating Sunday morning from coastal Japan in anticipation of a possible tsunami following Chile's 8.8-magnitude earthquake.

The northern part of the main island was looking at the possibility of a tsunami at least 9 feet high, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.

Rail service was halted in coastal areas and residents were urged to evacuate low-lying areas of the island nation.

The warning primarily affected fishing areas and tourist areas; major cities like Tokyo, which is inland, were not affected.

Sunday's alert was Japan's first major tsunami warning in more than 15 years, the agency reported.

A tsunami spawned by Chile's 1960 earthquake killed 140 people in Japan.

On Saturday, tsunami warnings from Chile's temblor initially covered the entire Pacific region, but they were canceled less than 18 hours later except for Russia, Japan and the Philippines.

RELATED TOPICS

The Philippines Institute of Volcanology and Seismology issued a Level-2 tsunami alert for the east coast of the Philippines.

A Level-2 alert means people are advised to stay away from the shoreline; residents near coastal areas facing the Pacific Ocean are advised to go farther inland.

Meanwhile, an official with the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said the island chain of Hawaii "dodged a bullet" after smaller-than-expected waves were reported.

Coast Guard crews said they had found no significant damage to ports or waterways as a result of the tsunami.

"There was no assessment of any damage in any county, which is quite remarkable," said Gov. Linda Lingle, who said witnesses had reported seeing "dramatic surges going on in the ocean."

The only airport that was shut, the Hilo airport on Hawaii, reopened late in the afternoon.

"If people have a confirmed reservation they can go to the airport now and they will be able to catch their flights," Lingle said.

The center also canceled warnings for Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Antarctica, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Pitcairn, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, French Polynesia, Mexico, the Cook Islands, Kiribati, Kermadec Island, Niue, New Zealand, Tonga, American Samoa, Jarvis Island, Wallis-Futuna, Tokelau, Fiji, Australia, Palmyra Island, Pojnston Island, Marshall Island, Midway Island, Wake Island, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, Howland-Baker, New Caledonia, Solomon Island, Nauru, Kosrae, Papua New Guinea, Pohnpei, Chuuk, Marcus Island, Indonesia, North Marianas, Guam, Yap, Belau, Philippines and Chinese Taipei.

Earlier, Hawaiian residents had scrambled to stock up on water, gas and food as sirens pierced the early morning quiet across the islands ahead of the tsunami.

Roads to beaches and other low-lying areas were closed and seaside hotels moved guests to higher ground.

Tsunami waves came ashore along the Chilean coast shortly after the earthquake, U.S. Geological Survey geophysicist Victor Sardina told CNN.

He said the largest was 9 feet near the quake's epicenter. Another wave, 7.7 feet, hit the Chilean town of Talcahuano, according to Eric Lau of the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.

Video from the town showed one car sitting in a large expanse of water, boats littering the docks and widespread flood damage.

A large wave on the island of Juan Fernandez -- 400 miles (643 km) off Chile's coast -- killed three people, Provincial Governor Ivan De La Maza said. Ten people were missing.

Navigational buoys in Ventura County, California, sustained minor damage as a result of a 2-foot surge and waves, according to the Alaska Tsunami Warning Center. The Ventura County Fire Department had one report of damage to a resident's dock from the surge.

In 1960, the tsunami triggered by the Chilean earthquake destroyed much of downtown Hilo and killed 61 people, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

The earthquake had a magnitude between 8.25 and 8.5, the USGS said, and the waves in Hilo Bay reached 35 feet, but only 3 to 17 elsewhere.

CNN's Kyung Lah, Mike Ahlers, Thelma Gutierrez, Carey Bodenheimer and Junko Ogura contributed to this report

View CNN Article

Friday, February 26, 2010

JAPAN: Magnitude 6.9 earthquake strikes off Japan's coast

February 26, 2010 | 2:03 p.m.

From the Associated Press

Tokyo - A magnitude 6.9 earthquake hit off Japan's southern coast early Saturday, shaking Okinawa and nearby islands, where a tsunami warning was briefly issued, Japan's Meteorological Agency said.


The quake occurred off the coast of the island of Okinawa at a depth of 6.2 miles at 5:31 a.m. Saturday (2031 GMT Friday), the agency said.


There have been no reports of major damage or casualties so far, except for reports of ruptured water pipes in two locations, Okinawa police official Noritomi Kikuzato said.


The Meteorological Agency had initially predicted a tsunami up to 6 feet near the Okinawan coast, warning nearby residents to stay away from the coastline. The agency later lifted the warning within two hours after observing only a small swelling of tide.


Ryota Ueno, a town official in the Nishihara district of Okinawa, said, "I was fast asleep when the quake hit, and I jumped out of bed. It felt like the shaking lasted forever."


There was no major damage in his house, and he then rushed to the town office to meet up with his colleagues and stand by in case of reports of damage from residents, Ueno told a telephone interview with public broadcaster NHK.


So far, only one resident in the town reported a ruptured water pipe, but no other damage reported, he said.


Masaaki Nakasone, another official at he Nanjo town, said his house shook violently but all furniture and other objects stayed intact.


"First there was a vertical shaking, then the house swayed sideways," Nakasone said.


Okinawa is about 1,000 miles southwest of Tokyo.


Japan is one of the world's most earthquake-prone countries. In 1995, a magnitude-7.2 quake in the western port city of Kobe killed 6,400 people.