The Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America will publish a special issue on the 11 March Magnitude 9.0-9.1 Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami. This is one of the best geophysically-recorded great earthquakes and the largest event to have occurred near Japan since at least 869 CE. The earthquake rupturedthe megathrust plate boundary in the Japan subduction zone, creating a tsunami that devastated parts of northeastern Honshu for up to 5 kilometers inland and caused damage as far away as western North America. The size of the local tsunami contributed extensively to the high death and damage tolls in the densely populated coastal region. Japan’s stringent seismic building codes, early-warning systems, and high public awareness of earthquake and tsunami hazards undoubtedly helped in saving many lives, but the size of the event and its tsunami exceeded expectations that had guided some earthquake mitigation efforts. The mainshock was preceded by several foreshocks, including one of magnitude 7.2 on March 9. Japan is one of the most heavily instrumented areas on Earth, providing extensive seismological, geodetic, and water-level information that will provide unprecedented resolution of this great earthquake event and the fundamental nature of deformation on the megathrust fault.
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Seismological Society’ of America
Raul R. Castro, Carlos Valdes-Gonzalez, Peter Shearer, Victor Wong, Luciana Astiz, Frank Vernon, Arturo Perez-Vertti, and Antonio Mendoza
Penerbit :
Carol A. Mark
Tahun :
2011
Buku lain-lain
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No Scan219
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No Klasifikasi-
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ISBN
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ISSN-
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No Registrasi057F112015
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Lokasi Terbit
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Jumlah Hal18
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Label-
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Versi DigitalTIDAK
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Versi FisikTIDAK
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Lokasi Rak Buku Fisik//
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Jumlah Exemplar Fisik Tersedia-