Magnitude | 6.1 - Richter scale |
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Depth | 26 km (16.2 miles) set by location program Km |
Location | NEAR THE SOUTH COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN LAT 34.778, LON 138.276 |
Date-Time | Aug 10, 2009 20:07:07 UTC |
Source | USGS NEIC (WDCS-D) |
Event ID(s) | us2009kdb4 |
Distances from major cities | |
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30 km (20 miles) SSW of Shizuoka, Honshu, Japan |
The southern Honshu earthquake of August 10, 2009, occurred near the Suruga Trough, on or very near the boundary between the Philippine Sea plate and the Amur plate (sometimes viewed as part of the Eurasia plate). The source region lies just south of the triple junction of the Philippine Sea plate, the Amur plate, and the Okhotsk plate (sometimes viewed as part of the North America plate) and is tectonically complex. In the epicentral region, the Philippine Sea plate subducts west or northwest beneath the Amur plate. Both the subducting Philippine Sea plate and the overriding Amur plate are seismically active due to high intraplate stresses, and the thrust-fault boundary between the plates is seismogenic. Present estimates of the earthquake’s epicenter, focal-depth, and focal-mechanism suggest that the shock did not occur on the plate interface, but they do not permit us to confidently determine if the earthquake occurred within the Philippine Sea plate or the Amur plate.
Earthquake Information for Asia
Earthquake Information for Japan