Japan’s oldest triple quake was in 7th century

Update: 2012-08-22 02:37 GMT
A group of researchers claimed to have found sediment of a tsunami that hit Shizuoka Prefecture in central Japan at the same time as the Hakuho earthquake of 684, the oldest recorded major quake that hit the Nankai region on the Pacific coast of western Japan.

The new findings in the Tokai region by the government-run National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology raise the possibility that three temblors occurred simultaneously at that time in wide areas in the Tokai, Tonankai and Nankai regions, which are considered to be particularly at high risk of major seismic activity.

Evidence of tsunami sedimentation at the time of the quake in the late seventh century had so far been found in the Tonankai and Nankai regions.

Until now, the Hoei quake of 1707 had been considered to be the oldest such triple disaster. The research team, headed by Osamu Fujiwara at the institution, found four layers of sandy sediments in two locations.

It concluded that the four layers were created by tsunami instead of river flooding because they contained the fossils of seashells and minerals found in the sea.

 The team believes one of the layers accumulated at the time of the Hakuho quake and the three others were created as a result of major quakes in 887, 1096 and 1498. 

Similar News

World Briefs