Tsunami and earthquakes in Japan Club
jiunge
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
Snow falls on a mashua that was beached kwa the hivi karibuni tsunami, in Miyako, Iwate prefecture. A shallow 6.5-magnitude earthquake hit off the northeast coast of Japan on Monday, the US Geological Survey said.

OSAKA, Japan (AFP) - A shallow 6.5-magnitude earthquake hit off the northeast coast of Japan on Monday, the US Geological Survey said.
The Japan Meteorological Agency issued a 50-centimetre (18 inch) tsunami warning for the Pacific coast of Miyagi prefecture, which was devastated kwa the huge earthquake and tsunami that hit on March 11.
OFUNATO, Japan (AFP) - Japan alisema Monday it will dump over 10,000 tons of low-level radioactive water into the Pacific as part of emergency operations to stabilise its crippled Fukushima nuclear plant.

The announcement of the last resort measure came as the Bank of Japan alisema business confidence had plummeted since the earthquake and tsunami hit on March 11, plunging the country into its worst crisis since World War II.

The UN atomic watchdog chief Yukiya Amano, alisema that the three-week-old emergency, which Japan has predicted will last for months, meant an end to a "business as usual" approach...
continue reading...
posted by Bearbay
7 injured as M6.4 Earthquake shakes Fukushima

National Jul. 31, 2011 - 05:30PM JST ( 35 )

TOKYO —

A strong 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck off northeast Japan’s Fukushima region, nyumbani to a crippled nuclear power plant, early Sunday, but there was no risk of a tsunami, seismologists said.

The tremor at 3:54 a.m. injured seven people but caused no damage to the Fukushima Daiichi plant, which was ravaged kwa a 9.0 quake and ensuing tsunami in March, the moto and Disaster Management Agency said.

In the city of Hitachinaka, a 60-year-old man broke his wrist when he was jolted off his kitanda kwa the tremor,...
continue reading...
Major disasters like the Japanese earthquake and tsunami au Pakistan's floods are likely to become zaidi frequent, and global governments must prepare for an uncertain future, according to a British report.

Paddy Ashdown, a member of the British House of Lords and ex-United Nations high representative to Bosnia and Herzegovina, alisema rich nations must help poorer countries to build up their defences against disasters.

In a government ripoti published Monday, he alisema scientists believe hivi karibuni natural disasters were not an aberration, but "the beginnings of a new kind of future in which mega-disasters...
continue reading...