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1974 Izu Peninsula earthquake

Coordinates: 34°36′N 138°48′E / 34.6°N 138.8°E / 34.6; 138.8
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1974 Izu Peninsula earthquake
The memorial cenotaph of earthquake
1974 Izu Peninsula earthquake is located in Shizuoka Prefecture
1974 Izu Peninsula earthquake
1974 Izu Peninsula earthquake is located in Central Japan
1974 Izu Peninsula earthquake
UTC time1974-05-08 23:33:29
ISC event748001
USGS-ANSSComCat
Local dateMay 9, 1974 (1974-05-09)
Local time08:33:29
Magnitude6.5 Ms
6.9 MJMA
Depth9 km
Epicenter34°36′N 138°48′E / 34.6°N 138.8°E / 34.6; 138.8
Areas affectedJapan
Max. intensityMMI VIII (Severe)

JMA 5−[1]
TsunamiYes[2]
Casualties38 dead or missing[2]

The 1974 Izu Peninsula earthquake (Japanese: 1974年伊豆半島沖地震) occurred on May 9 at 08:33 local time. The epicenter was located off the Izu Peninsula, Japan. Twenty-five people were reported dead. Landslides and damage to roads, buildings, and infrastructure were reported. This earthquake triggered a small tsunami.[3] The intensity in Tokyo reached shindo 3.[4] The magnitude of this earthquake was put at Ms 6.5, or MJMA 6.9.[5][6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ 震度データベース検索(地震別検索結果) Archived 2018-04-05 at the Wayback Machine Japan Meteorological Agency(Japanese)Retrieval 2018/04/04
  2. ^ a b 静岡県に被害をもたらした主な地震と日本で近年起きた主な地震 Shizuoka Prefecture Official HP(Japanese)Retrieval 2018/04/04
  3. ^ Hatori T. (1974), An Investigation of Small Tsunami Generated by the Izu-Hanto-oki Earthquake of 1974 (PDF), vol. 14, pp. 115–120, archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-06, retrieved 2011-07-21
  4. ^ Tamura C., Report on Damages to Structures in the Off Izu Peninsula Earthquake in May 9, 1974 (PDF), pp. 8–28, archived from the original (PDF) on October 6, 2011, retrieved July 21, 2011
  5. ^ Noguchi S. (1979). "On the Relation between Surface-Wave Magnitude and JMA Magnitude" (PDF). Journal of the Faculty of Science, Hokkaido University. Series VII. 6 (1): 213–225.
  6. ^ Akao Y., Noda S. & Inoue R. (1988). "Theoretical and semi-empirical approaches by using normal mode solution for reproducing seismic motions at intermediate periods" (PDF). Proceedings of Ninth World Conference on Earthquake Engineering August 2–9, 1988, Tokyo-Kyoto, JAPAN (Vol. II). pp. 769–774. Retrieved 2013-06-23.
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