Should be watchable online in the US.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/earth/j...ler-quake.html
We had a quake near Tokyo today at 16:55. I think this means stress has been shifted to faults near Tokyo. I would not be surprised if we have one or several very strong quakes in the next few days and weeks. The frequency of such a quake will be much higher because the quake will be closer, so the effects will be very different from those of the quake of March 11.
http://www.newscientist.com/embedded/japan-quake
13. Human, structural and financial consequences of a large Tokyo earthquake
The Cabinet Office of the Japanese government recently issued a risk assessment for large Tokyo earthquakes (Central Disaster Management Council 2005). They considered an MZ7.3 earthquake beneath Tokyo, similar to the 1855 Ansei-Edo shock. The 240 000–840 000 destroyed buildings in their estimate depend strongly on wind speed and time of day, because high winds spread fire and rush hour exposes people to falling objects. If an MZ7.3 earthquake struck at 18.00 in 15 m sK1 (33 miles hK1) winds, the Cabinet Office estimates 11 000 deaths, 210000 wounded and 96 million tons of wreckage. About 57% of the deaths and 77% of the housing collapses are attributable to fire, and 28% of deaths and 18% of the collapses are due to shaking. The projected cost of an MZ7.3 earthquake beneath Tokyo are $1.0 trillion (USD), which is 130% of the Japanese annual budget (Central Disaster Management Council 2005). Only about 5% of this loss is thought to be insured, and so the cost would be borne principally by home and business owners and the government. The total comprised $587 million direct losses associated with recovery and rebuilding, and $395 million in indirect losses due to production declines within and outside of Tokyo.
https://profile.usgs.gov/myscience/u...t_al_Tokyo.pdf
And if you want to see what a REAL megatsunami is, well, short of an asteroid strike...
At risk the entire Atlantic coast.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4XR7...eature=related
And Honolulu, not to mention the rest of the Pacific.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iw3Dj...eature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GtIJETdGDQQ
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/earth/j...ler-quake.html
We had a quake near Tokyo today at 16:55. I think this means stress has been shifted to faults near Tokyo. I would not be surprised if we have one or several very strong quakes in the next few days and weeks. The frequency of such a quake will be much higher because the quake will be closer, so the effects will be very different from those of the quake of March 11.
http://www.newscientist.com/embedded/japan-quake
13. Human, structural and financial consequences of a large Tokyo earthquake
The Cabinet Office of the Japanese government recently issued a risk assessment for large Tokyo earthquakes (Central Disaster Management Council 2005). They considered an MZ7.3 earthquake beneath Tokyo, similar to the 1855 Ansei-Edo shock. The 240 000–840 000 destroyed buildings in their estimate depend strongly on wind speed and time of day, because high winds spread fire and rush hour exposes people to falling objects. If an MZ7.3 earthquake struck at 18.00 in 15 m sK1 (33 miles hK1) winds, the Cabinet Office estimates 11 000 deaths, 210000 wounded and 96 million tons of wreckage. About 57% of the deaths and 77% of the housing collapses are attributable to fire, and 28% of deaths and 18% of the collapses are due to shaking. The projected cost of an MZ7.3 earthquake beneath Tokyo are $1.0 trillion (USD), which is 130% of the Japanese annual budget (Central Disaster Management Council 2005). Only about 5% of this loss is thought to be insured, and so the cost would be borne principally by home and business owners and the government. The total comprised $587 million direct losses associated with recovery and rebuilding, and $395 million in indirect losses due to production declines within and outside of Tokyo.
https://profile.usgs.gov/myscience/u...t_al_Tokyo.pdf
And if you want to see what a REAL megatsunami is, well, short of an asteroid strike...
At risk the entire Atlantic coast.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4XR7...eature=related
And Honolulu, not to mention the rest of the Pacific.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iw3Dj...eature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GtIJETdGDQQ
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