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Search resuls for: "Earthquake Research Institute"


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Japan's Noto Peninsula has newly exposed beaches due to the earthquake that struck Monday. Locals who were fishing at the time, reported the entire coastline uplifted when the quake hit. AdvertisementAccording to satellite imagery, Japan's Noto Peninsula was rattled and slightly enlarged when a 7.6-magnitude earthquake struck on January 1. Muck on the side of structures at Kaiso Fishing Port shows where they used to be underwater, after the earthquake uplifted the land. Earthquake Research Institute, University of TokyoThe Geospatial Information Authority of Japan published a preliminary satellite analysis of the Noto Peninsula.
Persons: , Muck Organizations: Service, Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, Geospatial, Authority of Japan, JAXA, Geospatial Information Authority Locations: Noto, Noto Peninsula, Fishing, Japan
Tokyo CNN —The world’s newest island has risen from the sea off the coast of the Japanese island of Iwo Jima in the Pacific Ocean. Japan’s Meteorological Agency (JMA) told CNN the unnamed island was formed by an undersea volcanic eruption. The photos show a small eruption sending a dark cloud of ash above the tiny island, which is now part of the Ogasawara Island chain. The island sits about 1,200 kilometers (750 miles) south of mainland Japan and a kilometer from Iwo Jima, the island that saw some of the fiercest battles of World War II in the Pacific. US Marines fought tens of thousands of Japanese garrisoned there in a battle that killed more than 7,000 Americans and 22,000 Japanese troops.
Persons: Setsuya Organizations: Tokyo CNN, Japan’s Meteorological Agency, CNN, Defense Force, JMA, Earthquake Research, University of Tokyo, volcanology, Japan Times, Pacific . US Marines Locations: Iwo Jima, Japan, Pacific
An ongoing volcanic eruption has created a tiny island near Iwoto. AdvertisementAdvertisementJapan has a new tiny island thanks to an ongoing eruption from an underwater volcano. The 328-foot-wide island emerged in the Ogasawara Island chain, about half a mile from Iwoto (formerly known as Iwo Jima). Those who want to marvel at the rare sight should do so quickly, as the island may not last very long, Usui told the AP. Similar volcanic islands appeared in the area in 1904, 1914, and 1986 but have all since been washed away, said Fukashi Maeno, an associate professor at Tokyo University's earthquake research institute, per The Guardian.
Persons: , Yuji Usui, Usui, Fukashi Maeno Organizations: Service, Japan Meteorological Agency, Associated Press, Guardian, New York Times Locations: Iwoto, Iwo, Tokyo
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