A magnitude 8.5 earthquake
struck off the east coast of Japan, shaking buildings in
Tokyo, but there was no danger of a tsunami and no reports of
damage since the quake was extremely deep
.
There were no reports of further irregularities at the
Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, damaged four years ago in a
massive 9.0 magnitude quake, or any other nuclear facilities.
The Shinkansen high speed train line had briefly stopped
between Tokyo and Osaka due a power outage and some trains in
Tokyo stopped as well for safety checks, causing crowds of
commuters in some of the city's liveliest areas to mill
around outside stations.
The quake, centred off the Ogasawara islands south of Tokyo,
occurred at a depth of 590km and, unusually, was felt
throughout much of Japan.
"It shook violently. Our Buddhist altar swayed sideways
wildly," Michiko Orita, a resident of the island of Hahajima,
near the epicentre, told NHK national television. "I have not
experienced anything like that, so it was so scary."
She added that things on the island were normal.
There were no reports of significant damage or injuries,
though the Tokyo Fire Department had received calls about
people suffering injuries through falls, NHK said.
In Chiba, just east of Tokyo, loudspeaker broadcasts called
on people to remain calm, but there were no signs of damage.
"Since it was magnitude 8.5 this was a very big quake, but
fortunately it was very deep at 590km," Naoki Hirata, an
earthquake expert at the University of Tokyo's Earthquake
Research Centre, told NHK.
"But the shaking was felt over a broad area... Fortunately,
because it was deep, there is little danger of a tsunami."
Tokyo Electric Power Co said there were no abnormalities at
the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant following the
quake.
On March 11, 2011, a massive 9.0 magnitude quake touched off
a tsunami that left nearly 20,000 people dead and nuclear
meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant.
Japan, one of the world's most seismically-active nations,
has been seeing a period of unusual activity over the last
year or so. In September 2014, 63 people were killed in the
eruption of Mount Ontake, a volcano in central Japan.
On Friday, at the end of a week marked by several earthquakes
in Tokyo, a volcano on the remote southern island of
Kuchinoerabujima erupted, forcing the evacuation of the
island's entire population. Volcanic activity has also picked
up at a resort area not far from Tokyo.
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