1872 Hamada earthquake
Earthquake in Japan
1872 Hamada earthquake (Japanese: 浜田地震) was an earthquake that occurred on March 14, 1872 (the sixth day of the second month of Meiji 5 in the old Japanese calendar), off the coast of Hamada, Shimane Prefecture in Japan.[1] This quake occurred at 16:40 local time.
Overview
- Date : March 14, 1872
- Magnitude : 7.1 MK[2][3]
- Epicenter : off coast Hamada, Shimane Prefecture
- Death toll : 551 (official confirmed)[4]
Damage
According to the official confirmed report, 4506 houses were damaged by the earthquake, 230 houses were burned, 551 people were killed, and landslides destroyed 6567 homes in the affected area.[4]
References
- ^ デジタル大辞泉プラス,世界大百科事典内言及. "浜田地震とは". コトバンク (in Japanese). Retrieved 2021-05-02.
- ^ "今日はこんな日(3月14日) 浜田地震(1872年) - 安心とくしま". 2012-01-14. Archived from the original on 2012-01-14. Retrieved 2021-05-02.
- ^ 国立天文台 [in Japanese] (November 2020). 理科年表 2021 令和3年. 丸善. p. 759. ISBN 978-4-621-30560-7.
- ^ a b "島根県の地震活動の特徴". www.jishin.go.jp. 地震調査研究推進本部. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2021-05-02.
- v
- t
- e
- 679 Tsukushi
- 684 Hakuho
- 869 Jōgan
- 1293 Kamakura
- 1361 Shōhei
- 1498 Meiō
- 1586 Tenshō
- 1596 Fushimi
- 1605 Keichō
- 1611 Aizu
- 1611 Sanriku
- 1662 Kanbun
- 1662 Hyūga-nada
- 1677 Bōsō
- 1703 Genroku
- 1707 Hōei
- 1741 Kampo
- 1751 Takada
- 1771 Great Yaeyama
- 1792 Unzen
- 1804 Kisakata
- 1828 Sanjō
- 1833 Shōnai
- 1847 Zenkoji
- 1854 Iga–Ueno
- 1854 Nankai
- 1854 Tōkai
- 1855 Edo
- 1858 Hietsu
- 1872 Hamada
- 1889 Kumamoto
- 1891 Mino–Owari
- 1894 Tokyo
- 1894 Shōnai
- 1896 Sanriku
- 1896 Rikuu
- 1909 Anegawa
- 1911 Kikai Island
- 1914 Senboku
- 1922 Shimabara
- 1923 Great Kantō
- 1925 North Tajima
- 1927 North Tango
- 1930 North Izu
- 1933 Sanriku
- 1936 Miyagi
- 1939 Oga
- 1940 Shakotan
- 1941 Hyūga-nada
- 1943 Tottori
- 1944 Tōnankai
- 1945 Mikawa
- 1946 Nankai
- 1948 Fukui
- 1952 Tokachi
- 1961 North Mino
- 1963 Kuril Islands
- 1964 Niigata
- 1968 Ebino
- 1968 Hyūga-nada
- 1968 Tokachi
- 1973 Nemuro Peninsula
- 1974 Izu Peninsula
- 1978 Izu Ōshima
- 1978 Miyagi
- 1982 Urakawa
- 1983 Sea of Japan
- 1984 Nagano
- 1993 Kushiro
- 1993 Okushiri
- 1994 offshore Sanriku
- 1995 Hanshin
- 2000 Izu Islands
- 2000 Tottori
- 2001 Geiyo
- 2003 Miyagi
- 2003 Tokachi
- 2004 Chūetsu
- 2005 Fukuoka
- 2005 Miyagi
- 2006 Kuril Islands
- 2007 Chūetsu
- 2007 Kuril Islands
- 2007 Noto
- 2008 Iwate–Miyagi
- 2008 Iwate
- 2009 Shizuoka
- 2011 Tōhoku
- 2011 Nagano
- 2011 Shizuoka
- 2011 Miyagi
- 2011 Fukushima
- 2012 Chiba
- 2012 Sanriku
- 2014 Nagano
- 2015 Ogasawara
- 2016 Kumamoto
- 2016 Tottori
- 2016 Fukushima
- 2018 Osaka
- 2018 Hokkaido Eastern Iburi
- 2019 Yamagata
- 2021 Fukushima
- 2021 Miyagi
- 2021 Chiba
- 2022 Fukushima
- 2023 Noto
- 2024 Noto
- 2024 Hyūga-nada
35°9′0″N 132°6′0″E / 35.15000°N 132.10000°E / 35.15000; 132.10000
This article about an earthquake in Asia is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e