Geographical Review of Japan
Online ISSN : 2185-1727
Print ISSN : 1347-9555
ISSN-L : 1347-9555
Volume 75, Issue 9
Displaying 1-3 of 3 articles from this issue
  • KUMAHARA Yasuhiro
    2002 Volume 75 Issue 9 Pages 553-570
    Published: August 01, 2002
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The purposes of this paper are to discuss the development of fluvial terraces along the Souzu and Matsuda Rivers in southwestern Shikoku using widespread marker tephras and to estimate the crustal movement in the region on the basis of deformed terrace profiles.
    First the author identified several tephras from the terrace and tales deposits, including the Zentsubo, Kubo, and Ogawa tephras to establish terrace chronology. The fission-track age of the Zentsubo tephra with the zeta calibration is 0.58±0.11 Ma. The Kousenji II tephra located below the Zentsubo tephra shows a fission-track age of 0.66±0.15 Ma. In terms of the similarities of mineral composition, age, and refractive indices of volcanic glass and hornblende, the Zentsubo tephra can be correlated with the Yufugawa pyroclastic flow deposits that erupted from the Yufuin basin at about 0.6 Ma.
    The fluvial terrace surfaces along the Souzu and Matsuda Rivers are classified into four levels: H1, H2, M, and L in descending order. The Zentsubo and Kousenji II tephras are intercalated in the upper part of the H1 terrace deposits, indicating that the age of the H1 terrace surface is approximately 0.6 Ma. The occurrence of the Ogawa tephra in L terrace deposits or in tales deposits on L terrace deposits suggests that the L terrace surface was formed around or after 70-80 ka. The H1 terrace is a broad fill-top terrace formed by the paleo-Minamiuwa River, taking a different course from the present courses of the Souzu and Matsuda Rivers, whereas the lower terraces occur along the present river systems. The paleo-Minamiuwa River disappeared after the H1 terrace was formed by a large-scale river capture due to the beginning of upwarping in the middle reaches.
    The thickness of the H1 terrace deposits indicates that the tectonic setting in this area was stable or subsiding until 0.6 Ma. Subsequently, the upwarping of the Shikoku Mountains began at around 0.6 Ma and has continued up to the present, causing the deformation of the longitudinal profile of the H1 terrace surface at Uwaodo and Kamiari along the Souzu and Matsuda Rivers. This upwarping triggered a large-scale river capture by the Matsuda and Akagi Rivers at around 0.6 Ma.
    Download PDF (2279K)
  • Toward a More Comprehensive Approach to Gender Studies in Japan
    Yuichiro NISHIMURA
    2002 Volume 75 Issue 9 Pages 571-590
    Published: August 01, 2002
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This paper reviews the geographic perspectives on gender and the workplace in Japan and discusses these developments in a Japanese geographic context. Although some geographic studies have been conducted in Japan on the gendered workplace, they have taken a limited viewpoint of gender perspectives. The author critically examines several papers on the spatial division of labor and time-geography, because these studies neglected gender relations in the workplace.
    Reviewing studies by feminist geographers on the new gender order emerging with post-Fordism (McDowell 1991) and the microgeographies of the workplace constructed based on gender relations, this paper attempts to recognize the changing gender order and everyday gender relations in workplaces in Japan. In the Toyotism period (since the 1970s-80s), it was likely that occupational segregation and gender division of labor were different from these in Western countries. However, the situation changed in the 1990s. Restructuring in the 1990s affected gender relations in the workplace, but it also affected the boundary between the home and the workplace. A new space, where boundaries between the home and workplace are unclear, is emerging.
    When examining how the new gender order in Japan is constructed, microgeographies in the workplace, economic/social/cultural/political factors, and networks must all be taken into account.
    Download PDF (2907K)
  • 2002 Volume 75 Issue 9 Pages 591-594,i_1
    Published: August 01, 2002
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Download PDF (1879K)
feedback
Top