The depth of 7.8 magnitude Japanese earthquake caused widespread shaking

Japan Deep Quake
June 2015JAPAN The main reason why the earthquake that occurred west of the Ogasawara Islands on Saturday night shook most parts of the country — in addition to the temblor’s strength — was that the quake’s focus was extremely deep, according to seismologists and the Japan Meteorological Agency. The shaking was remarkably strong in the Kanto region. Seismologists attribute this to fact that the seismic waves reached the region after passing through undersea tectonic plates, which are harder than land plates and transmit waves more easily. The agency said strong seismic waves can reach faraway places in such a “region of abnormal seismic intensity.” Prof. Takashi Furumura of the University of Tokyo’s Earthquake Research Institute said that tectonic plates lie on top of one another in a complicated way under the Japanese archipelago and under the surrounding seas.
The Pacific Plate is the deepest and descends mainly below the Philippine Sea Plate, reaching deep under the Japanese archipelago. Yuichiro Tanioka, a professor of seismology at Hokkaido University, said: “Undersea plates are harder than land plates. Thus, seismic waves running through the plates [under the sea] tend not to weaken.” It is believed that the seismic waves that reached the Kanto region initially ran along the Pacific Plate, headed for shallower offshore areas, and then spread to another plate contacting the Pacific Plate. This is probably why, seismologists said, the waves did not weaken remarkably.
In September 2013, a magnitude-6.8 earthquake occurred about 450 kilometers deep off Torishima island of Tokyo. The quake produced shaking of up to 4 on the Japanese seismic intensity scale of 7 in wide areas from Hokkaido to the Kanto region. A magnitude-6.7 earthquake occurred about 370 kilometers deep off Kyoto Prefecture in July 2007, shaking a wide range of places. Hokkaido, far from the epicenter, recorded shaking of up to 4 on the Japanese seismic intensity scale. –Japan News
This entry was posted in Black Swan Event, Civilizations unraveling, Deep Focus earthquake, Earth Changes, Earth Watch, Earthquake Omens?, High-risk potential hazard zone, Human behavioral change after disaster, Infrastructure collapse, Lithosphere collapse & fisssure, Potential Earthchange hotspot, Prophecies referenced, Seismic tremors, Signs of Magnetic Field weakening, Time - Event Acceleration, Volcano Watch. Bookmark the permalink.

9 Responses to The depth of 7.8 magnitude Japanese earthquake caused widespread shaking

  1. Dennis E. says:

    Just an observation from reviewing the posted picture. If quakes or some quakes occur at such a deep level within the earth, does that undermine the stability of the land mass above it?
    For example, removing the dirt from under the foundation of a house?
    Am I thinking too much here?

    Like

    • Doesn’t undermine the stability of the land mass under it, but it does agitate the land along the plate boundaries in subduction zones – the west coast of the US and Chile are cases in point. Here is where you have your greatest concentration of earthquakes and volcanic mountain ranges.

      Like

  2. David says:

    On the usgs site today, two fairly significant sized shallow depth quakes were recorded off the coast of Oregon (5.5 & 5.8, at 15k & 10k), yet hardly anything showed on the shake map, and nor were these events shown in bold red type! Wondered why the downplay?

    Like

  3. niebo says:

    Illuminates the “Great Earthquake” of Revelation 16:18-20 (per your citation in the previous article) and the physics “behind” such an event in, er, a most unsettling way.

    Like

  4. Yellow Bird says:

    “and now for something completely different…”

    http://www.ibtimes.com/fracking-resumes-denton-texas-after-governor-outlaws-local-bans-oil-gas-drilling-1947031
    “Natural gas drilling is starting up again in Denton, Texas, despite the city’s 7-month-old ban on hydraulic fracturing. Vantage Energy resumed operations Monday at its Denton well just weeks after Gov. Greg Abbott passed a law prohibiting cities from banning fracking on their home turf. Three activists were arrested at the drill site Monday morning after attempting to block an access road.
    “The Texas ban is part of a broader movement in oil- and gas-rich states to restrict decisions about fracking, drilling, wastewater disposal and pipelines to state regulators and commissioners — leaving municipalities, local agencies and citizens with limited control over energy activities.
    “In Ohio, the state Supreme Court ruled in February that the state has “exclusive authority” and that cities can neither ban nor regulate fracking. On Saturday, Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin signed a bill that similarly prohibits cities from enacting drilling bans, despite local concerns over the rising number of earthquakes tied to fracking activity in the state. …”

    just more topsy turvy democracy in action.
    business as usual

    Like

    • niebo says:

      “. . . leaving municipalities, local agencies and citizens with limited control . . . .”

      When “state regulators and commissioners”, acting on behalf of “corporate interests” (be they “businesses” or systems of “taxation” [centralized governments] that profit from business profit), have more “power” than the citizenry . . . we have fascism.

      Like

      • Yellow Bird says:

        someone said,
        “In an age of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.”

        Like

      • Yellow Bird says:

        here’s another:
        http://ecowatch.com/2015/03/15/jon-stewart-gov-christie-exxon-settlement/
        ““Did Satan’s skunk get diarrhea?,” Jon Stewart said last week in reference to (the Exxon settlement)…
        “According to Workers World, “The oil giant and its predecessor companies have been polluting New Jersey’s wetlands for over a century. It was held liable for poisoning 1,500 acres around the Bayway refinery in Linden and facilities in Bayonne. Linden became a cancer cluster for New Jersey refinery workers.”
        “Now, it’s being reported that New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie interfered with the state’s $9 billion lawsuit against Exxon, making the final settlement a mere $250 million.”

        a year or so ago, Pennsylvania also attempted to bring criminal charges against Exxon for deliberately dumping 57,000 gallons toxic yuck… Exxon’s response? “There’s no lasting impact”… annnd… that was pretty much that.
        http://ecowatch.com/2014/01/03/exxon-criminal-charges-fracking-wastewater-spill/

        want more? EcoWatch has compiled plenty.
        Exxon knows they are Untouchable… by human standards…

        Like

All comments are moderated. We reserve the right not to post any comment deemed defamatory, inappropriate, or spam.