http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/12/world/asia/12japan.html?ref=global-home

Huge Earthquake Triggers Tsunami Off Japan's Coast
By KEVIN DREW
Published: March 11, 2011 
A tsunami hit the coast of northeast Japan on Friday in the aftermath of an 8.9 
magnitude earthquake about 80 miles offshore. Television images showed waves of 
more than 12 feet roaring inland. CNN reported that air and land transportation 
was severely disrupted. 

Enlarge This Image
 
Kyodo News, via Associated Press
An area flooded by the tsunami in Iwaki, Fukushima Prefecture in Japan, after 
an earthquake struck off the northeastern coast. 

Related
  a.. Times Topic: Tidal Waves and Tsunamis
Enlarge This Image
 
NHK, via Reuters TV
A tsunami carried boats across waters in Kamaishi city port in this still image 
taken from video footage. 

There no immediate reports of deaths or injuries but the force of the waves 
washed away cars on coastal roads and crashed into buildings along the shore, 
The Associate Press reported. 
A second major earthquake of 7.4 magnitude was reported as aftershocks shook 
the region. 

The U.S. Geological Survey said the earthquake was magnitude 8.9, which the 
agency labeled a "mega" quake. The tremor occurred at about 230 miles northeast 
of Tokyo and at a depth of about 15 miles. 

The quake occurred at 2:46 p.m. Tokyo time and its location was off Honshu, 
Japan's most populous island. 

A tsunami warning was in effect for Japan, Russia, Marcus Island and the 
Northern Marianas, according to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center. Japan's 
meteorological agency warned that a tsunami as high as 20 feet could strike the 
coast near Miyagi prefecture, closest to the epicenter. 

The Associated Press reported that a large ship swept away by the tsunami 
rammed directly into a breakwater in Kesennuma city in Miyagi prefecture, 
according to footage on public broadcaster NHK. 

Japanese television showed major tsunami damage in northern Japan. Video 
footage also showed buildings on fire in the Odaiba district of Tokyo, The 
Associated Press reported. 

"It just seemed to go on and on," Katherine Wallace told the BBC, who was in an 
office building in Tokyo, said of the quake tremor. 


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