2012年11月11日日曜日
30% of Japanese live on land vulnerable to shaking
New research shows almost one-third of the Japanese population lives on land that is vulnerable to shaking in the event of an earthquake.
A study group from the National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention made the analysis.
The researchers found that areas that are especially vulnerable to shaking account for 6 percent of Japan's total area. The areas include the Kanto Plain around Tokyo and plains surrounding other major cities -- Osaka, Nagoya, and Sapporo.
The researchers say about 38 million people, or nearly one-third of the Japanese population, live in these areas.
They say there is a high possibility of liquefaction, particularly in coastal regions and riverside districts created using landfill and sand.
The study points to the need for extensive efforts to make buildings quake-proof and capable of withstanding liquefaction.
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