Japan
Niigata region rocked
by 6M earthquake, a day
after LA jolt
30
March, 2014
An
earthquake measuring 6.0 on the Richter scale hit Japan’s Niigata
prefecture on Sunday morning, with strong tremor being felt in Tokyo,
said a meteorological agency.
The
epicentre was at 35.8 degrees north latitude and 140.1 degrees east
longitude, with a depth of 80 km, Xinhua reported citing the agency.
USGS,
however, put the intensity at 4.5 magnitude, which not severe by
Japanese scale, as below:
Event Time
- 2014-03-30 03:23:35 UTC
- 2014-03-30 12:23:35 UTC+09:00 at epicenter
- 2014-03-30 08:53:35 UTC+05:30 system time
Location
35.761°N
140.203°E depth=61.4km (38.1mi)
Nearby Cities
- 5km (3mi) NNW of Sakura, Japan
- 7km (4mi) NW of Shisui, Japan
- 10km (6mi) WSW of Narita, Japan
- 12km (7mi) NNE of Yotsukaido, Japan
- 46km
(29mi) E of Tokyo,
Japan
Japan
and the surrounding islands sit on four major tectonic plates:
Pacific plate; North America plate; Eurasia plate; and Philippine Sea
plate. The Pacific plate is subducted into the mantle, beneath
Hokkaido and northern Honshu, along the eastern margin of the Okhotsk
microplate, a proposed subdivision of the North America plate.
Farther
south, the Pacific plate is subducted beneath volcanic islands along
the eastern margin of the Philippine Sea plate. This 2,200 km-long
zone of subduction of the Pacific plate is responsible for the
creation of the deep offshore Ogasawara and Japan trenches as well as
parallel chains of islands and volcanoes, typical of Circumpacific
island arcs.
Similarly,
the Philippine Sea plate is itself subducting under the Eurasia plate
along a zone, extending from Taiwan to southern Honshu that comprises
the Ryukyu Islands and the Nansei-Shoto trench.
Subduction
zones at the Japanese island arcs are geologically complex and
produce numerous earthquakes from multiple sources. Deformation of
the overriding plates generates shallow crustal earthquakes, whereas
slip at the interface of the plates generates interplate earthquakes
that extend from near the base of the trench to depths of 40 to 60
km.
At
greater depths, Japanese arc earthquakes occur within the subducting
Pacific and Philippine Sea plates and can reach depths of nearly 700
km. Since 1900, three great earthquakes occurred off Japan and three
north of Hokkaido.
They
are the M8.4 1933 Sanriku-oki earthquake, the M8.3 2003 Tokachi-oki
earthquake, the M9.0 2011 Tohoku earthquake, the M8.4 1958 Etorofu
earthquake, the M8.5 1963 Kuril earthquake, and the M8.3 1994
Shikotan earthquake.
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