HOME > Outline of the Great East Japan Earthquake > 1. Occurrence of the Earthquake and Approaching Tsunami

1. Occurrence of the Earthquake and Approaching Tsunami

A magnitude 9.0 earthquake occurred on March 11, 2011 at 14:46 JST. An emergency rescue helicopter “Michinoku” was scrambled from Sendai Airport 37 minutes after the occurrence of the earthquake. A few minutes later, Sendai Airport was engulfed by tsunami.
Live coverage of damage and tsunami by the rescue helicopter Michinoku provided a great deal of important information to determine our response to the disaster.

On Friday, March 11, 2011 at 14:46 JST, a massive earthquake struck Japan.

The earthquake had a magnitude of 9.0 and a maximum seismic intensity of 7.

A massive earthquake struck eastern Japan, mainly the Tohoku region. An intensity of 7 was recorded in Kurihara of Miyagi Prefecture, and 6 or greater in prefectures of Miyagi, Fukushima, Ibaragi, and Tochigi. The earthquake had a magnitude of 9.0, which was the largest in the recorded history of Japan.
The Great East Japan Earthquake was an earthquake of an interlocked or interlinked type, where four mega-earthquakes including the main shock occurred intermittently. Mega-earthquakes with a magnitude of 7.0 or greater occurred in the area extending from off the Sanriku Coast to Off Ibaragi Prefecture during 40 minutes after the main shock.
Many aftershocks occurred; more than 400 aftershocks with a magnitude of 5.0 or greater had been registered in one month. Epicenters clustered in a large area extending from Off Iwate Prefecture to Off Ibaragi Prefecture, measuring about 500 km from north to south and about 200 km from east to west.

Source : Japan Meteorological Agency

Earthquake Summary

Source:
Earthquake Research Center of
Association for the Development of
Earthquake Prediction
Date and Time On Friday, March 11, 2011 at 14:46 JST
Hypocenter Sanriku Offshore (N38.1, E142.9, 130km ESE off Oshika Peninshula) Depth 24km
Magnitude 9.0
Name of the earthquake The 2011 earthquake off the Pacific coast of Tōhoku
JMA Seismic Intensity Intensity 7: The northern part of Miyagi Prefecture
Intensity 6 upper: The southern part and central part of Miyagi Prefecture, The Nakadori and Hamadori area of Fukushima Prefecture, The northern part and southern part of Ibaraki Prefecture, The northern part and southern part of Tochigi Prefecture
Intensity 6 lower: The coastal southern part, inland northern part, and inland southern part of Iwate Prefecture, Aizu area of Fukushima Prefecture, The southern part of Gunma Prefecture, The southern part of Saitama Prefecture, The northwestern part of Chiba Prefecture

A massive tsunami struck the Pacific coast of east Japan.

The biggest tsunami in the recorded history of Japan struck the coastal area of the Tohoku region.

Source : Japan Meteorological Agency

Immediately after a strong earthquake struck the Tohoku region, the massive tsunami hit the Pacific coast of the Hokkaido, Tohoku, and Kanto regions. The tsunami which struck the coasts reached more than 10 m in height, leaving behind the unprecedented damage. Later survey showed that the height of tsunami depended on the topography of shore or bay, and hence the damage also varied in extent.
The tsunami climbed a slope in some places. The tsunami hit Miyako of Iwate Prefecture reached more than 39 m above sea level, which was the highest ever in the recorded history, surpassing the height of 38.2 m observed in Ōfunato of Iwate Prefecture back in the 1896 Sanriku earthquake.

Source : Taro Town Fisheries cooperative, Miyako City, Iwate Prefecture (former Taro Town)

Tsunami Summary

[Major Tsunami Warnings]

The Hokkaido Pacific coast eastern area, the Hokkaido Pacific coast central area, the Hokkaido Pacific coast western area, The Aomori Pacific coast, Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima, Ibaragi Prefectures, Kujukuri Sotobo of Chiba Prefecture, the Izu Islands (As of March 11, 15:33 JST)

[Height of the tsunami] * estimated using the corresponding tsunami trace heights

Hachinohe (Aomori Prefecture) 6.2m Ōfunato (Iwate Prefecture) 11.8m
Kuji Port (Iwate Prefecture) 8.6m Ayukawa, Ishinomaki City (Miyagi Prefecture) 7.7m
Miyako (Iwate Prefecture) 7.3m Sendai Port (Miyagi Prefecture) 7.2m
Kamaishi (Iwate Prefecture) 9.3m Sōma (Fukushima Prefecture) 8.9m

出典:気象庁

Run-up height of the tsunami

Miyako (Iwate Prefecture) 39.211m
Kamaishi (Iwate Prefecture) 30.480m
Ōfunato (Iwate Prefecture) 31.839m
Rikuzentakata (Iwate Prefecture) 22.184m
Kesennuma (Miyagi Prefecture) 22.671m
Minamisanriku (Miyagi Prefecture) 20.408m
Sōma (Fukushima Prefecture) 21.303m

Source : Preliminary results by the "2011 Tohoku Earthquake Tsunami Joint Survey Group" (December 15, 2011)
http://www.coastal.jp/ttjt/
*Reliability A (High reliability. Data with a clear trace and the least error in measurement.)

Complete destruction 128,931 houses Half destruction 269,040 houses

It was the unprecedented scale of disaster, which claimed nearly 20,000 lives, including the missing.

The strong earthquake and subsequent massive tsunami devastated the area along the Pacific coast, claiming nearly 20,000 lives, including the missing, leaving behind more than 330,000 evacuees.
They also caused extensive destruction: they ruined houses completely, swept away roads and bridges or collapsed them, wrecked levees totally, etc.
Some municipal office buildings, which were supposed to become headquarters of disaster response, were also affected. Route 45, 4 and 6 along the Pacific coast were cut in several places, which isolated many municipalities along the coast.

The Minamisanriku Disaster Prevention Office Building in Miyagi Prefecture Source: the Tohoku Regional Bureau

Damage statistics

Deaths and missing persons Deaths 15,880 Missing 2,694
(Source: the Emergency Disaster Response Headquarters, February 2013)
Damage to buildings (residential) Complete destruction 128,931 houses
Half destruction 269,040 houses
Partial destruction 736,227 houses
(Source: the Emergency Disaster Response Headquarters, February 2013)
Number of evacuees 315,196
(Source: the Emergency Disaster Response Headquarters, February 2013)
Damage to rivers 2,115 facilities
(Source: the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, May 2011)
Damage to levees and revetments Complete and half destruction: about 190 km out of total 300 km levees and revetments in the three prefectures of Iwate, Miyagi, and Fukushima.
(Source: the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, May 2011)
Damage to ports and harbors International hub ports/important ports and harbors 11 Regional ports and harbors 18
(Source: the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, May 2011)
Damage to sewage treatment plants Plants suspended operations 18 (the sewage plants in the coastal areas of the prefectures of Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima, and Ibaragi) Pipes and culverts: 957 km out of total 66,086 km sewer in 137 municipalities.
(Source: the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, May 2011)
Damage to roads Freeway 15 routes National highways under direct control of the Japanese Government 69 sections
National highways under control of prefectures 102 sections
Prefectural roads 539 sections
(Source: the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, May 2011)
Flooded area due to tsunami Iwate Pref. 580,000 km2
Miyagi Pref. 3,270,000 km2
Fukushima Pref. 1,120,000 km2
(Source: the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, May 2011)

Scramble 37 minutes after the earthquake.

Live coverage from the rescue helicopter helped make decisions of early responses.

Source: the MLIT Tohoku Regional Bureau

The massive tsunami engulfed Sendai Airport; but just before that, a rescue helicopter "Michinoku" of the MLIT Tohoku Regional Bureau took off from the airport. The crew members of an airline company, immediately after the earthquake, cut the broken shutter of the hangar and prepared for takeoff. The helicopter took off from the airport by the order from the MLIT Tohoku Regional Bureau 37 minutes after the earthquake.
The helicopter broadcasted almost inconceivably huge tsunami and sent shocking image of massive destruction live. This firsthand information helped prioritize the initial response: priority should be given to securing a rescue and relief route.

Source: the MLIT Tohoku Regional Bureau
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