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Sanriku Coast

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Jōdo-ga-hama at the Rikuchu Kaigan National Park in 2007

The Sanriku Coast (三陸海岸さんりくかいがん, sanriku kaigan) is a coastal region on the Pacific Ocean, extending from southern Aomori prefecture,[1] through Iwate prefecture and northern Miyagi prefecture in northeastern Honshū, which is Japan's main island.[2] The name comes from the historical region of Sanriku (or "three riku"), referring to the former provinces of Rikuō and Rikuchū (in present-day Aomori) and Rikuzen (in Miyagi).[3]

Tourist destination

There are the Tanesashi Coast, the Rikuchu Kaigan National Park and the Minami-Sanriku Kinkazan Quasi-National Park in the Sanriku Coast region.[4]

Earthquakes and tsunami

In 1896, devastation following the tsunami

The bays of this irregular coastline tend to amplify the destructiveness of tsunami waves.[5] Significant events which devastated coastal communities include:

Prior to 2011, the tsunami history of Sanriku might have been interpreted as a story of progressively fewer casualties due to human intervention and planning. The 2011 disaster created a new baseline for analysis of regularly occurring tsunamis.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Japan-i, Sanriku Coastline/Kamaishi Daikannon
  2. ^ Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Sanriku Coast; Sanriku
  3. ^ Nippon-Kichi, 三陸さんりくリアス式海岸りあすしきかいがん Sanriku-riasushiki-kaigan  Saw-tooth Sanriku Coastline
  4. ^ "しゅ海岸かいがん国立こくりつ公園こうえん編入へんにゅう環境省かんきょうしょう方針ほうしん" (in Japanese). Daily Tohoku. October 5, 2010. Retrieved March 15, 2011.
  5. ^ Satake, Kenji. (2005). Tsunamis: Case Studies and Recent Developments, p. 99., p. 99, at Google Books
  6. ^ Clancy, Gregory. "Sanriku: Japan's 'Tsunami Coast'," The Telegraph (UK). March 14, 2011.

References

  • Satake, Kenji. (2005). Tsunamis: Case Studies and Recent Developments. Dordrecht: Springer. 10-ISBN 1402033265/13-ISBN 9781402033261; 10-ISBN 1402033311/13-ISBN 9781402033315; OCLC 173481388