Mount
Fuji 'under more pressure than last eruption'
Pressure
in the magma chamber of Japan's Mount Fuji is now higher than it was
the last time the volcano erupted more than 300 years ago, scientists
say, according to a report Thursday.
26
April, 2012
Tectonic
shifts triggered by last year's huge 9.0 magnitude undersea quake
have left the chamber under 16 times the minimum pressure at which an
eruption can occur, researchers said.
Researchers
at the National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster
Prevention studied the tectonic movements caused by the
tsunami-triggering quake on March 11, 2011 and a magnitude 6.4 quake
that rocked central Japan four days later, Kyodo News reported.
They
estimated that 1.6 megapascals of pressure, equivalent to atmospheric
pressure of some 15.8 kilograms per square centimetre (226 pounds per
square inch), was being exerted on the magma chamber.
Volcanic
eruptions can be triggered by as little as 0.1 megapascals of
pressure, and the reading of 1.6 megapascals is "not a small
figure", said senior researcher Eisuke Fujita, according to
Kyodo.
Mount
Fuji, an almost perfectly cone-shaped mountain that stands as one of
Japan's national symbols, last erupted in 1707, after an earthquake
struck and boosted the pressure on its magma chamber, the report
said, citing researchers.
Scientists
say an eruption some time over the coming years is a possibility, but
add that heightened pressure is not the only variable.
They
say so far no signs of activity have been seen at Mount Fuji,
possibly because the amount of magma that has accumulated is not
substantial enough, Kyodo said.
If
Mount Fuji erupts, it could cause up to 2.5 trillion yen ($32
billion) of damage, according to a government report in 2004, Kyodo
said.
In
May a team of researchers warned that the mountain may collapse if a
newly-discovered faultline underneath it shifts.
The
huge quake of March 2011 and tsunami that it generated devastated a
large area of the country's northeast, killing around 19,000 people
and generating a nuclear emergency at Fukushima.
Japan
not ready for Mt Fuji eruption
Reuters
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