Times Colonist

Japan rocked by strong quake

No tsunami warning issued; several people injured, but no damage reported

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TOKYO — A powerful earthquake struck near remote Japanese islands and shook most of the country Saturday evening, but it occurred well beneath the Earth’s surface and did not trigger a tsunami warning. Several people suffered non-life-threatenin­g injuries and there were no reports of deaths or major damage.

The magnitude-8.5 offshore quake struck off the Ogasawara islands at a depth of 590 kilometres, the Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency said. The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake had a magnitude of 7.8 and a depth of 678 km.

The temblor was powerful enough to rattle most of Japan, from the southern islands of Okinawa to Hokkaido in the north. It caused buildings to sway in Tokyo — about 1,000 km north of the Ogasawara islands — and temporaril­y disrupted some train services in the city. About 400 houses in Saitama prefecture, just north of the capital, were without power, according to the Tokyo Electric Power Co.

This morning, a strong magnitude-6.4 earthquake struck off Japan’s Izu islands, which are north of the Ogasawara islands, the U.S. Geological Survey said. It struck at a depth of 13 km with its epicentre 630 km southsouth­east of Tokyo.

The earthquake was not strong enough to generate a tsunami warning or close enough to the islands to cause any significan­t damage or injuries, said John Bellini, a geophysici­st with the U.S.G.S. in Golden, Colorado. He said it is considered a separate seismic event and not an aftershock to the magnitude-8.5 quake that struck hours earlier.

Late Saturday, at Tokyo’s Roppongi Hills shopping and business complex, elevators stopped soon after the magnitude-8.5 earthquake struck the area, forc- ing hundreds of visitors to climb down the stairs. Among them were about 200 people who came to see the Star Wars exhibit on the 52nd floor.

In Saitama, a woman in her 70s sustained a minor head injury when a ceramic plate fell from a cupboard, local police said. In Kawasaki, just south of Tokyo, a 56-year-old office worker fell down and suffered a rib injury when the quake caught him by surprise, according to Japanese public broadcaste­r NHK.

Yoshiyuki Sasamoto, a municipal official on Chichijima island, which is part of the Ogasawara island group, told NHK that he initially felt a mild tremor, but when he thought it was over “there was a violent shaking and I couldn’t even stand on my feet.”

At an inn on the Ogasawara island of Hahajima, furniture shook violently, although nothing fell or broke, innkeeper Michiko Orita told NHK.

“It was so frightenin­g. The entire house shook and a Buddhist altar violently swayed like I have never experience­d before,” she said, adding that all her guests were safe.

The meteorolog­ical agency did not issue a tsunami warning because the quake struck so far beneath the Earth’s surface. Deep offshore earthquake­s usually do not cause tsunamis and generally cause less damage than shallow ones.

In March 2011, a magnitude9.0 earthquake rocked northeaste­rn Japan, triggering a tsunami that killed more than 18,500 people and ravaged much of the northern Pacific coast. The depth of that quake was just 24 km, according to the meteorolog­ical agency.

 ??  ?? Soccer fans at a match in Hiratsuka, southwest of Tokyo, react to a powerful earthquake that struck a group of remote Japanese islands and shook most of the country on Saturday.
Soccer fans at a match in Hiratsuka, southwest of Tokyo, react to a powerful earthquake that struck a group of remote Japanese islands and shook most of the country on Saturday.

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