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Post-event survey of the 2024 Noto Peninsula earthquake tsunami in Japan

Masatoshi YUHI, Shinya UMEDA, Mamoru ARITA, Junichi NINOMIYA, Hideomi Gokon, Taro ARIKAWA, T. Baba, Fumihiko Imamura, Akio Kawai, Kenzo Kumagai, Shuichi KURE, Takuya Miyashita, Anawat Suppasri, Hisamichi Nobuoka, Tomoya Shibayama, Shunichi Koshimura, Nobuhito Mori

2024Coastal Engineering Journal55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

On January 1 2024, at 16:10 JST, an earthquake of Mw 7.5 occurred underneath the Noto Peninsula of Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan. This event caused a cascading disaster impact on cities in the Noto Peninsula through a series of strong earthquake shakes, strong ground motions, slope failures, liquefaction, fire, and tsunamis. The tsunami first reached Suzu City a few minutes after the earthquake, eventually affecting approximately 340 km of the coast from the Ishikawa to Niigata Prefectures. The Coastal Engineering Committee of the Japan Society of Civil Engineers conducted an organized post-event field survey to understand the impact of tsunamis on land. This study summarizes the post-event field survey results and provides a general understanding of tsunami behavior and damage using measured tsunami inundation and run-up heights.

Topics & Concepts

PeninsulaField surveySeismologyGeologyEvent (particle physics)Tsunami waveGeographyArchaeologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsEarthquake and Tsunami EffectsEarthquake and Disaster Impact Studiesearthquake and tectonic studies
Post-event survey of the 2024 Noto Peninsula earthquake tsunami in Japan | Litcius