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Japan; towns now flood at high tide

Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 2:20 am
by Riverwind (imported)
Quake shifted Japan; towns now flood at high tide

By JAY ALABASTER, Associated Press Jay Alabaster, Associated Press – Mon May 9, 5:46 am ET

ISHINOMAKI, Japan – When water begins to trickle down the streets of her coastal neighborhood, Yoshiko Takahashi knows it is time to hurry home.

Twice a day, the flow steadily increases until it is knee-deep, carrying fish and debris by her front door and trapping people in their homes. Those still on the streets slosh through the sea water in rubber boots or on bicycle.

"I look out the window, and it's like our houses are in the middle of the ocean," says Takahashi, who moved in three years ago.

The March 11 earthquake that hit eastern Japan was so powerful it pulled the entire country out and down into the sea. The mostly devastated coastal communities now face regular flooding, because of their lower elevation and damage to sea walls from the massive tsunamis triggered by the quake.

In port cities such as Onagawa and Kesennuma, the tide flows in and out among crumpled homes and warehouses along now uninhabited streets.

A cluster of neighborhoods in Ishinomaki city is rare in that it escaped tsunami damage through fortuitous geography. So, many residents still live in their homes, and they now face a daily trial: The area floods at high tide, and the normally sleepy streets turn frantic as residents rush home before the water rises too high.

"I just try to get all my shopping and chores done by 3 p.m.," says Takuya Kondo, 32, who lives with his family in his childhood home.

Most houses sit above the water's reach, but travel by car becomes impossible and the sewage system swamps, rendering toilets unusable.

Scientists say the new conditions are permanent.

Japan's northern half sits on the North American tectonic plate. The Pacific plate, which is mostly undersea, normally slides under this plate, slowly nudging the country west. But in the earthquake, the fault line between the two plates ruptured, and the North American plate slid up and out along the Pacific plate.

The rising edge of plate caused the sea floor off Japan's eastern coast to bulge up — one measuring station run by Tohoku University reported an underwater rise of 16 feet (5 meters) — creating the tsunami that devastated the coast. The portion of the plate under Japan was pulled lower as it slid toward the ocean, which caused a corresponding plunge in elevation under the country.

Some areas in Ishinomaki moved southeast 17 feet (5.3 meters) and sank 4 feet (1.2 meters) lower.

"We thought this slippage would happen gradually, bit by bit. We didn't expect it to happen all at once," says Testuro Imakiire, a researcher at Japan's Geospatial Information Authority, the government body in charge of mapping and surveys.

Imakiire says the quake was powerful enough to move the entire country, the first time this has been recorded since measurements began in the late 19th century. In Tokyo, 210 miles (340 kilometers) from Ishinomaki, parts of the city moved 9 inches (24 centimeters) seaward.

The drop lower was most pronounced around Ishinomaki, the area closest to the epicenter. The effects are apparent: Manholes, supported by underground piping, jut out of streets that fell around them. Telephone poles sank even farther, leaving wires at head height.

As surrounding areas clear rubble and make plans to rebuild, residents in this section of Ishinomaki are stuck in limbo — their homes are mostly undamaged and ineligible for major insurance claims or government compensation, but twice a day the tide swamps their streets.

"We can't really complain, because other people lost so much," says Yuichiro Mogi, 43, as his daughters examine a dead blowfish floating near his curb.

The earthquake and tsunami left more than 25,000 people either dead or missing, and many more lost their homes and possessions.

Mogi noticed that the daily floods were slowly carrying away the dirt foundation of his house, and built a small embankment of sandbags to keep the water at bay. The shipping company worker moved here 10 years ago, because he got a good deal on enough land to build a home with a spacious front lawn, where he lives with his four children and wife.

Most of the residences in the area are relatively new.

"Everyone here still has housing loans they have to pay, and you can't give away this land, let alone sell it," says Seietsu Sasaki, 57, who also has to pay off loans on two cars ruined in the flooding.

Sasaki, who moved in 12 years ago with his extended family, says he hopes the government can build flood walls to protect the neighborhood. He never paid much attention to the tides in the past, but now checks the newspaper for peak times each morning.

Officials have begun work on some embankments, but with much of the city devastated, resources are tight. Major construction projects to raise the roads were completed before the tsunami, but much of that work was negated when the ground below them sank.

The constant flooding means that construction crews can only work in short bursts, and electricity and running water were restored only about two weeks ago. The area still doesn't have gas for hot water, and residents go to evacuee shelters to bathe.

"We get a lot of requests to build up these areas, but we don't really have the budget right now," says Kiyoshi Koizumi, a manager in Ishinomaki's roads and infrastructure division.

Sasaki says he hopes they work something out soon: Japan's heavy summer rains begin in about a month, and the higher tides in autumn will rise well above the floor of his house.

Re: Japan; towns now flood at high tide

Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 2:25 am
by Riverwind (imported)
This quake moved the entire country, it is no longer where it was. Just how do you think you can build anything that mother nature cant destroy?

On the flip side, its because this planet is alive that we able to live on this rock, if it were a dead planet so would we be dead.

River

Re: Japan; towns now flood at high tide

Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 4:45 am
by Dave (imported)
The sinking of Japan was one of the reasons that the tsunami could breach the protective walls at Fukushima (spelling) where the five nuclear reactors sat. The earthquake moved the island eastward by measurable amounts.

Re: Japan; towns now flood at high tide

Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 10:26 am
by Arab Nights (imported)
Riverwind (imported) wrote: Wed May 11, 2011 2:25 am Just how do you think you can build anything that mother nature cant destroy?

On the flip side, its because this planet is alive that we able to live on this rock, if it were a dead planet so would we be dead.

River

So true. I like your last sentence quoted.

All over the west beginning about 35 million years ago were volcanic events that covered hundreds of square miles to a hundred or hundreds of feet deep.

I once worked on a mineral deposit in old metamorphic rocks. We learned that we could drill thru those rocks into gravel. The entire thing had slid down from somewhere else onto the valley. I know of several places where blocks of rock up to tens of miles across have moved fairly intact from one place to another. Imagine the headlines if that happened in Los Angeles, Denver or Salt Lake.

Re: Japan; towns now flood at high tide

Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 2:20 pm
by moi621 (imported)
Robert E. Howard held that Japan was once part of a pre Atlantean great land mass and (evil) kingdom. There is some good sub oceanic Bimini road quality architecture there.

My understanding was Japan moved closer to California and not that it is sinking by the most recent events. It could be folding over but, ? less land mass? . I uploaded on this as a style of hegemony only witnessed of the Dutch. A Manifest Destiny into oceanic lands. Just different methods.

Moi

Re: Japan; towns now flood at high tide

Posted: Thu May 12, 2011 4:47 am
by A-1 (imported)
O.K.,

So now can we start looking for Atlantis in the Atlantic Ocean instead of at Santorini in the Mediterranean Sea?

...Or, is the CIA going to send Gerald Posner to write a book denying that it even happened?