The 1914 Senboku earthquake (Japanese: 1914年秋田仙北地震) occurred on March 15, 1914, at 04:59 or 05:00 local time (or March 14 at 20:00 UTC) according to various sources in northern Japan.[1][2][3] The earthquake had a magnitude of Ms 7.0.[1]
The epicenter was in Akita Prefecture, Japan. Ninety-four people died and 324 were injured.[4]Senboku District (Japanese: 仙北郡) was seriously affected. The earthquake caused liquefaction.[5] Explosions simultaneous with the earthquake were reported in Mount Asama.[6]
References
^ abcdefE.R. Engdahl; A. Villaseñor (2002). "Global Seismicity: 1900–1999". In William H.K. Lee; Hiroo Kanamori; Paul C. Jennings; Carl Kisslinger (eds.). International handbook of earthquake and engineering seismology. Part A. Amsterdam: Academic Press. p. 673. ISBN0-08-048922-2. OCLC648303010.
^Tokuji Utsu (2002). "A List of Deadly Earthquakes in the World: 1500–2000". In William H.K. Lee; Hiroo Kanamori; Paul C. Jennings; Carl Kisslinger (eds.). International handbook of earthquake and engineering seismology. Part A. Amsterdam: Academic Press. p. 703. ISBN0-08-048922-2. OCLC648303010.
^The Geology of Japan by T. Moreno, S.R. Wallis, T. Kojima, W. Gibbons, p. 374
^"Document"(PDF). histeq.jp. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2019-02-09. Retrieved July 11, 2021.
Mizuta, Toshihiko; Kagami, Hiroshi (2009), "Literature Survey on Damage Distribution Due to Akita Senboku (Kowakubi) Earthquake of March 15, 1914", AIJ Journal of Technology and Design, 15 (29): 325, doi:10.3130/aijt.15.325