Journal of Japan Society of Civil Engineers, Ser. B2 (Coastal Engineering)
Online ISSN : 1883-8944
Print ISSN : 1884-2399
ISSN-L : 1883-8944
Invited Paper
NATIONWIDE FIELD SURVEY OF THE 2011 OFF THE PACIFIC COAST OF TOHOKU EARTHQUAKE TSUNAMI
The 2011 Tohoku Earthquake Tsunami Joint Survey Group
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2011 Volume 67 Issue 1 Pages 63-66

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Abstract

 An earthquake of magnitude 9.0 occurred off the Pacific coast of Tohoku, Japan, on March 11, 2011. It generated a tsunami 130 km off the northern coast of Japan. The tsunami first reached the Japan mainland 20 min after the earthquake and attacked over 1,300 km along the Pacific coast, inundating over 400 km2 of land. As of 14 July, estimated fatalities were 16,011 with additional 5,242 missing. This tsunami was the first case that the modern and well-developed tsunami countermeasures faced such an extreme event.
 A nationwide tsunami survey has been conducted by joint research groups of 299 researchers among 64 different universities/institutes. Inundation heights and run-up heights measured at 5,247 points in total. On the Sendai plain, the maximum inundation height was 19.5 m, and the tsunami propagated as a bore more than 5 km inland. Along the ria coast, about 50-200 km to the north of Sendai, the narrow bays caused focusing tsunami and generated the largest inundation heights and run-ups. The maximum run-up height measured 40.4 m, resulting in the catastrophic destruction of towns and cities.

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© 2011 by Japan Society of Civil Engineers
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