The Citizen (Gauteng)

Japanese island wiped off map

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– Missing: A tiny island in northern Japan. Or so authoritie­s fear, prompting plans for a survey to determine if the outcrop has been washed away, ever-so-slightly shrinking the country’s territoria­l waters.

The island, known as Esambe Hanakita Kojima, was only officially surveyed and registered by Japan’s coastguard in 1987, who couldn’t even say exactly how big it was.

Until recently, it rose 1.4-metres above sea level, and was visible from the very northern tip of Japan’s northern Hokkaido island. But now, it has disappeare­d. “It is not impossible that tiny islands get weathered by the elements,” a coastguard official said.

The disappeara­nce of the island “may affect Japan’s territoria­l waters a tiny bit”, she added, but only “if you conduct precision surveys”.

Japan pours resources into protecting its outer islands, particular­ly the remote Okinotori islands in the Pacific, which secures a significan­t portion of the nation’s exclusive economic zone.

It is also locked in disputes with neighbours, including China and South Korea, over the sovereignt­y of several islands in the region.

Prone to earthquake­s and severe weather, Japan has found itself not only losing, but sometimes gaining territory thanks to natural disasters and extreme weather.

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