1961 North Mino earthquake
Earthquake in Japan
36°06.7′N 136°42.0′E / 36.1117°N 136.7000°E / 36.1117; 136.7000[1]The 1961 Kita Mino earthquake (Japanese: 北美濃地震) is an earthquake that occurred on August 19, 1961, near the border between Ishikawa, Fukui and Gifu Prefectures in Japan.[4] The magnitude was 7.0.[5] The earthquake left 8 people dead and 43 people injured.[6][7]
References
- ^ a b 震度データベース検索 - 気象庁
- ^ "北美濃地震(1961年8月19日) | 災害カレンダー". Yahoo!天気・災害 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2021-06-14.
- ^ 北美濃地震調査報告 気象庁 験震時報第27巻 pp.43-67
- ^ "気象庁 | 気象庁が名称を定めた気象・地震・火山現象一覧". www.jma.go.jp. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
- ^ デジタル大辞泉. "北美濃地震とは". コトバンク (in Japanese). Retrieved 2021-06-14.
- ^ "岐阜県:岐阜県の地震災害". 2015-10-10. Archived from the original on 2015-10-10. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
- ^ "北美濃地震(災害)". geo-gifu.org. Archived from the original on 2021-06-14. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
External links
- 北美濃地震調査報告 - 気象庁 験震時報第27巻
- "北美濃地震 (1961年8月19日)". Yahoo!天気・災害 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2021-06-14.
- 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
This article about an earthquake in Asia is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e