Everything about 2004 Ch Etsu Earthquake totally explained
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The began at 5:56 p.m. on Saturday,
October 23,
2004 (0856
UT, same day). The
Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) has named it the
Heisei 16 Niigata Prefecture Chuetsu Earthquake (平成16年新潟県中越地震) or
The Mid Niigata Prefecture Earthquake of 2004. Niigata Prefecture is located in the
Hokuriku region of
Honshū, the largest island of Japan. The initial earthquake caused noticeable shaking across almost half of Honshū, including parts of the
Tohoku,
Hokuriku,
Chūbu, and
Kantō regions.
Earthquake details
The first quake struck the Chuetsu area of Niigata Prefecture,
Japan with a reading of 7 on the Japanese
shindo scale at
Kawaguchi, Niigata. On the
Richter scale, the moment magnitude of the earthquake is estimated at 6.9. (For comparison, the
Great Hanshin earthquake, which devastated much of
Kobe, measured 7 on the shindo scale, with a magnitude of 7.2.) The earthquake occurred at a depth of 15.8 km. The JMA gave the coordinates of the earthquake as .
A second earthquake occurred at 6:12 p.m. (16 minutes after the first). This one, at a much shallower depth, also caused a shindo of 6+ and had a magnitude of 5.9. A third, at 6:34, had a shindo of 6−. At 7:46, another shindo 6− earthquake occurred. Intervening and subsequent earthquakes of lesser intensity also shook the region. During the first 66 hours, 15 earthquakes with intensities of shindo 5− or higher rocked the Chuetsu region.
In a press release, the Geographical Survey Institute (GSI) of the Government of Japan published preliminary estimates that a fault having a length of 22 km and a width of 17 km moved approximately 1.4 m.
This was the deadliest earthquake to strike Japan since the January 1995
Great Hanshin earthquake.
Damage
As late as November 3, the 39th fatality attributable to the earthquakes occurred as perceptible aftershocks continued. Over 3,000 injuries were reported in Niigata Prefecture. Over one hundred thousand people fled their homes. The earthquakes caused houses to collapse in Ojiya and damaged thousands in the area.
For the first time in its history, a
Shinkansen train derailed while in service. Eight out of ten cars of the Toki 325 (a
200 Series Shinkansen) derailed on the
Joetsu Shinkansen line between
Nagaoka Station in
Nagaoka and
Urasa Station in
Yamato; no injuries were reported among the 155 passengers. Railbeds, bridges and tunnels were all affected.
East Japan Railway Company stopped all trains in Niigata Prefecture, including the extensively damaged
Joetsu Line,
Shinetsu Main Line,
Iiyama Line,
Tadami Line and
Echigo Line. Part of Nagaoka Station appeared ready to collapse as a result of an aftershock, but after a brief closure, the station reopened.
The segment of the Joetsu Shinkansen between
Echigo Yuzawa Station and Tsubame-Sanjo Station closed. Buses transferred passengers between the two operating segments of the line:
Tokyo Station–Echigo Yuzawa Station and Tsubame-Sanjo Station–
Niigata Station.
On
December 27,
2004, service resumed on all remaining parts of the Joetsu and Iiyama Lines reopened. On December 28, 2004, the Joetsu Shinkansen also reopened, the last to do so.
Japan Highways closed all expressways in Niigata Prefecture. Closures affected the
Kanetsu Expressway and the
Hokuriku Expressway. As of November 4, the Kanetsu Expressway remained closed between Nagaoka Interchange and Koide Interchange. This segment reopened on November 5.
Landslides and other problems forced closure of two national highways,
Route 8 and
Route 17, as well as several prefectural roads. This isolated several localities, including nearly the entire
village of
Yamakoshi, which was then a village in the district of
Koshi but since merged with and became part of the city of
Nagaoka. On
July 22,
2005, the government lifted the nine-month-old evacuation order for 528 of the 690 affected households.
The earthquakes also caused a landslide that partially buried three vehicles. A young boy was rescued from one of these vehicles, but his mother and sister perished. (Recent typhoons had waterlogged the soil, making landslides more likely.)
The quake broke water mains. Extensive electric power, telephone (including cellular telephone) and Internet outages were reported. The cellular telephone system suffered from direct damage to relay stations, as well as depletion of battery back-up power supplies in as little as a day.
Aftermath
On
April 1,
2007, the directive to evacuate five settlements in the former village of Yamakoshi (later part of the city of
Nagaoka) was lifted. Residents were permitted to return to their homes after a span of nearly two and a half years.
History
Niigata Prefecture has been hit by numerous earthquakes in recorded history. Notable recent ones include a large quake on June 16, 1964 had a magnitude of 7.5, killing 28, where major
liquefaction had occurred and
tsunami destroyed the port of Niigata city. This quake was important in that, along with the
1964 Alaska earthquake, it was the first time engineers really began studying liquefaction in detail.
There was also the
2007 Chūetsu offshore earthquake, both striking shortly after major
typhoons passed by, causing complications.
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