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The monster tsunami that left a Japanese nuclear power plant on the brink of meltdown measured at least 14 metres high, the plant's operator said today.
The Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) had earlier estimated the height of the wave at 10 metres at its Fukushima No.1 plant, about 250 kilometres north-east of Tokyo.
"Now we estimate the height at more than 14 metres. We have found traces of the tsunami at such elevations," TEPCO spokesman Naoki Tsunoda said, adding that the wave was 14 metres high when it passed through the plant's parking area.
A tsunami can surge to an elevation higher than its height at the time when it hits shore, Japanese media noted.
The stricken plant's twin complex, about 10 kilometres to the south, was also hit by the tsunami but received less extensive damage.
An unidentified subcontract worker at the Fukushima No.2 plant told public broadcaster NHK that he evacuated to a hill immediately after the quake crushed an embankment and broke the arm of a crane at his plant.
"There was a backwash which left the seabed clearly seen some 200 metres offshore from the beach," he said.
"Then the tsunami approached all at once and surged onto the plant.
"The tsunami cleared high above the dyke and came rushing down to wash away one parked car after another. I was very scared," he said.
The plants were designed to withstand earthquakes of magnitudes up to 8.0 and tsunami waves of up to 5.7 metres at the No.1 plant and 5.2 metres at the No.2.
Mike Oxlong wrote:[SIZE="4"]Japan nuke plant crippled by 14-metre wave [/SIZE]
wuchan wrote:Let me guess, the next comments will be:
"we planned for a maximum 10 meter wave"
"there was no way we could predict a 14 meter wave"
FG Lurker wrote:For me it's a fairly simple equation. If someone is living here temporarily and has no real roots in Japan then seeing them decide to bail when the going gets tough is pretty much expected. It's good for Japan to see this too, it reminds them where people's loyalties are.
When long-term residents who have built lives here bail when things start to get tough... Those people are "fair-weather friends." Can you really trust them to stick by you if things get tough? Would you want to go into business with such a person? I think these are valid questions.
When long-term residents who are located in complete safety 100s of km from the quake or reactors bail then I start to get angry. Lots of people left Kansai due to radiation concerns. Seriously, WTF people!? Idiots.
On a slightly different (but related) note... Many people have said Japan should allow citizens to hold multiple nationalities, and the DPJ even seemed somewhat open to the idea. (One of the few things I thought they had right...) This disaster has shown perfectly why allowing multiple nationalities is a bad idea for the country: When the shit hits the fan you want to make sure your citizens are tied to the country and likely to stick around to help make things right. People who aren't willing to be 100% committed to the country shouldn't hold that country's passport. I doubt the Japanese have missed the "flyjin lesson", I don't think we will see multiple nationality here anytime soon.
Bucky wrote:All of you FG's who have stuck it out in Japan during this crises have earned your "I survived the Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami" merit badges. Those folks who cut and ran,. . . Well here's a story for you.
Mike Oxlong wrote:Idiotic CNN Hostess Argues With Meteorologist About Radiation
FG Lurker wrote:It's incredible that things have gone as well as they have, all things considered.
canman wrote:... It is amazing, but I must tell you all of these aftershocks are playing havoc with my nerves. ...
Taka-Okami wrote:I think seeing Gaijin flee is an instinctive reaction to them NOT being accepted by the Japanese. They could have gone down to Fukushima and taken a piss on the reactor and they still wouldnt be accepted as a 'we Japanese'. So, if you feel you'll never be part of the group, I think a lot of people will think 'fuck you'! I'm out!.
If this kind of disaster was to happen in Aus or even Canada I doubt you would have seen this type of reaction from 'Gaijin'.
Sarutaro wrote:That's not really fair. Many Japanese left Tokyo too. To leave or not is mainly a question of how easy it is (employee vs. company president, broke vs rich, have car or not, etc).
American Oyaji wrote:Guys, I REALLY hope I'm wrong, but this is going on nearly two weeks. I think that quake was the precursor of THE BIG ONE.
You might think this was it. Somehow, I don't think so, but I really hope I'm wrong. I really do.
Catoneinutica wrote:Well, the scientific consensus really does seem to be that A BIG ONE is coming, if not THE BIG ONE. You FGs have probably all read how a major displacement of the big ol' plates creates all sorts of pressure down the line, and how the massive shift that caused the 2004 tsunami was followed four months later by a powerful earthquake nearby, one that fortunately didn't do much damage because it struck around a relatively uninhabited Indonesian island.
In any case, if I lived or worked on liquefaction-prone reclaimed land, I'd be implementing a get-me-outta-here plan, because any major quake would be unfold pretty much according to the Kobe script. I'd also be assessing - I am! - just how likely the neighbors' shit-shacks are likely to start fire.
Yep. Do you know what the ironic thing is? A lot of the landfill in Kanagawa-ku, Naka-ku, Nishi-ku is the rubble cleaned up from the Great Kanto Earthquake.cstaylor wrote:Isn't most of Yokohama's minato-mirai area on reclaimed land?
Greji wrote:That's a BS shot. Why would they redsnot you for that post? Takes all kind I guess.....
Iraira wrote:Dude, she'll spread for you...got get it!
American Oyaji wrote:Guys, I REALLY hope I'm wrong, but this is going on nearly two weeks. I think that quake was the precursor of THE BIG ONE.
You might think this was it. Somehow, I don't think so, but I really hope I'm wrong. I really do.
A BRITISH mum told last night of her terror trapped and starving in the eerie ghost town that is Tokyo after the tsunami.
Keely Fujiyama, 37, phoned The Sun to describe a city in fear of nuclear catastrophe - with streets deserted and food, water and fuel running out.
Yokohammer wrote:How BIG does THE BIG ONE have to be?
IkemenTommy wrote:This earthquake really divided people into two categories:
1. The ones that complained, packed their bags, and ran off like big French pussies (sorry Coligny, I couldn't resist!)
2. The ones that got their shit together, tried to live their lives normally, and had the strength to move on
I wonder where this Mrs. Fujiyama fit in... I can only guess.
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