Japan is located in the region of geologic instability known as the Pacific Ring of Fire. Due to where Japan is located there are approximately fifteen hundred earthquakes each year and is also subject to floods, blizzards, typhoons, and due to volcanic activity on the ocean floor Japan is also subject to Tsunamis. Japan’s most recognized volcano even though it’s no longer active and has been dormant for years is Mount Fuji with a cone-shaped peak of 12,388 feet and is about 70 miles southwest of Tokyo. Japan is made up of more than 3,000 islands scattered off the eastern coast of mainland Asia. The Japanese call there islands Nippon which means “source of the sun” and others may interpret it as “Land of the Rising Sun.” There are four major
The country of Japan is an island nation, which is separated from Mainland Asia by the Sea of Japan. (“Facts about Japan”)
Mt Fuji is a symbol of Japan: contributing to physical, cultural and spiritual representation of Japan. Fuji is also known as one of the three ‘holy’ mountains along with Mount Tate and Mount Haku Fuji stands 3776 meters (12380 feet). It’s still an active stratovolcano and sits on a triple junction of tectonic movement. Fuji is approximately 100km (62 miles) from the largest city and the capital of Japan, which is Tokyo. The last time Fuji erupted which was between 1707 and 1708, volcanic ash fell on Tokyo. Lately the volcano has experienced a rise in popularity from Japanese locals, tourists and artists. Around 2000 and 2001 Japan experienced seismic activity under the volcano and levels were slightly higher than usual, uplifting the
Walter Weston, in 1922, said “The geographical features of Japan have much in common with those of ancient Hellas [Greece]. In both locations there are the same combinations of mountains, valleys, and plains, [and] a deeply indented coastline, with its bays, peninsulas, and islands off the coast. Few places inland are far removed from the mountains, and none are really distant from the sea. . . . The land was on all sides well protected, and yet also open to the sea; and in each case, too, there was free
Ring of Fire volcanoes circle the Pacific Ocean. The horseshoe shaped circle is 40,000 km (25,000 miles) long. It has 452 volcanoes with 75% of the world's active volcanoes in the circle. Geologists use the term Ring of Fire to define the volcanoes and earthquakes around the Pacific Ocean. Did you know that most of the active volcanoes on Earth are located underwater, along The Ring of Fire. the ring of fire includes more than 450 volcanoes. It stretches for almost 25,000 miles, in the shape of a horseshoe (as instead to an actual ring) from the southern tip of South America, along the west coast of North America, across the Bering Strait, down through Japan, and into New Zealand. The ring of fire has more than 75% of the world's volcanoes
Japans history dates back almost 53,000 years and is filled with interesting and fascinating events. Most of Japans actions have left the major world powers in the world stunned. The base of this amazing country is astonishing just by itself. The base is a bunch of active and large under water volcanoes. Japans uniqueness from the rest of the world ranges from its culture to its very interesting history to the change in government every few hundred years and their trading dilemma with petroleum and their assortment of fish that they export. Japan as a country is so very appealing and kind compared to the rest of the world its no wonder that it’s geographically separate from the rest of the world.
With the surrounding seas as a valuable resource, Japan is a chain of islands that stretches from north to south. Because of where these islands are located, many earthquakes occurred. Most of Japan's region, except the coastal plains, lies on a plateau, or an area of high flat land. Japan is also a very mountainous region. In fact, most of Japan is covered by mountains. "About 188 of Japan's mountains are volcanoes", according to Medieval and Early Modern Times, p.297. The mountains and islands of Japan kept them isolated. Which meant that the sea surrounding made it easy for people to travel by ship. Not only that, but it also encouraged people to become merchants, traveling by ship to trade. Merchants traded, or exchanged lacquered goods, sword blades, and copper used for silk, dyes, pepper, books, and porcelain. The physical geography also greatly affected the people's daily life through food growth and harvest. According to
Located west of today’s Tokyo and Yokohama lays Mount Fuji, it lays on three plates known as the Filipino plate, Okhotsk plate, and the Amurian plate. Mount Fuji is comprised of three volcanos, Komi-take being the oldest, Ashitaka-yama (older Fuji) being the second oldest, and mount Fuji itself being the youngest. As early as 400,000-300,000 years ago emerged both the Komi-take and Ashitaka-yama, building itself through an ejection of pyroclastic and lava flows that made a foundation made of basaltic rock. The younger activities began 11,000 years ago, eruptions that would start to shape the characteristic features of younger Fuji starting with large volumes of lavas and small ejection of rocks that would distribute across the north west and south that would develop on top of the older volcanos. As time progresses, younger Fuji’s activities would become raging with seasonal explosives and major pyroclastic falls (Miyaji 1992). Mt. Fuji’s most recent eruptions would occur in the 9th, 10th, 11th and as early as the 18th century; the most notable one was the Jogan eruption in 864 A.D. that spewed a large amount of lava changing the north base of the volcano and creating the Sea of Trees or the Aokigahara (Koki 2005). The last eruption in 1707 A.D. that caused an 8.6 magnitude earthquake that damaged local farms and villages, even raining down volcanic ashes in Tokyo; a distance that is more than 60 miles
Located on Honshu Island, Mount Fuji is the highest mountain in Japan and is an active volcano that last erupted in 1707-08. Mount Fuji is widely known for it's exceptionaly symmetrical cone shape which is snow-capped several months a year and is now a cultural symbol of Japan. It stands on the border between Yamanashi and Shizuoka Prefectures and can be seen from Tokyo and Yokohama on clear days. Mount Fuji is also one of the three holy, sacred mountains in Japan that has been worshipped, along with Mount Haku and Mount Tate. This amazing mountain is the single, most popular, tourist site in Japan for both Japanese and foreign tourists. It is known as a Special Place of Scenic Beauty and, as per UNESCO, Mount Fuji has "inspired
Japan is known for having a long history of earthquakes as it sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire. The Ring of Fire is a series of tectonic plates that stretches from the tip of South America and along the coast of North America, it goes across the Bering Strait, through Japan and into New Zealand. It is the site of where most earthquakes occur and is filled with seismic activity as well as active volcanoes. Since Japan lies on The Pacific Ring of Fire it is hit with numerous numbers of earthquakes. Because of this, the Japanese government has issued safety measures by having every household to keep a survival kit (supplied with food, water, flashlights and first aid kit) and enforcing buildings to become more resistant to earthquakes in areas
Cause: Japan is at a triple-plate subduction boundary between the Eurasian continental plate and the Philippine and Pacific oceanic plates.
Japan is an island nation that is located across the Japanese Sea. Japan consists of the islands of Hokkaiodo, Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu (Yamada & Kurashige, 2003). The landscape of Japan is seventy-one percent mountainous ("Population Demographics," 2007). Japan is a small country that is situated in the northern temperate zone. Japan experiences the four seasons similar to that of North America. Japan experiences typhoons which are a lot stronger than their sister hurricanes in the Atlantic (Yamada &
The Japanese volcanic island arc known as the Ogasawara Archipelago enjoys a warm, marine subtropical climate and is free from the industrial overpopulation of mainland Japan. These islands are situated in one of the most highly active volcanic regions of the world, part of the Pacific Ring of Fire, and formed by the subduction of the Pacific Plate and the Philippine Sea Plate boundaries. The islands themselves were formed by eruptions of lava due to undersea oceanic plate convergence over fifteen million years ago. Nishino-shima's coordinates lie at 27.247°N / 140.874°E, and is one of the youngest islands, believed to be only ten thousand years old, with the last active vent erupting in 1973. The Ogasawara Islands are known in English as the Bonin Islands, about 600 miles south of Japan, visited by a ferry ride from Tokyo. Only the two largest islands, Chichijima (Father Island) and Hahajima (Mother Island) in this chain are inhabited. [Nunn, 2009]
The volcanoes belong to the Pacific Ring of Fire, caused by subduction zones of the Pacific plate beneath continental and other oceanic plates along its margins. Japan lies in a zone of extreme crustal instability. Mount Fuji poses the biggest threat the Tokyo. Located only 60 miles from Tokyo, this stratovolcano is very much active and could cause mass hysteria for many people when it next erupts. A volcanic eruption can pour ash and lava all over the city.
The 1995 Kobe earthquake (known as the Great Hanshin” earthquake in Japan) hit Japan on Tuesday the 17th of January at 5:40 am. It is called the “Kobe earthquake”, not because the epicentre of the earthquake was in the Japanese city of Kobe but because Kobe was very much hit the hardest. In fact, the actual epicentre of the earthquake was in on the northern end of Awaji Island (fig. A+A’).
Japan, the Land of the Rising Sun, is an island in East Asia in the Pacific Ocean. Its capital is Tokyo and the national language is Japanese. Japan is considered a great power and is a member of both the United Nations and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. The country enjoys a highly skilled work force and is considered to have one of the most highly educated countries in the world. At one point, the 2000s, Japan also laid claim to providing 4 of 5 top circulated newspapers in the world. (Foreign & Commonwealth Office, 2017) (OECD, 2017)