A series of strong earthquakes kill 7 and Injure 700 near Kashiwazaki, Japan as buildings crumbled, a bullet train derailed and roadways were tore apart.
At least four people were missing Saturday night. Throughout the country, electric, gas and telephone services were knocked out and water and sewage mains burst.
The most powerful at magnitude 6.8, occurred over several hours and centered on Ojiya.
Japan rests atop several tectonic plates and is among the world's most earthquake-prone countries.
Magnitude 6.9 - NEAR THE WEST COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN 2004 October 23 08:56:01 UTC
Preliminary Earthquake Report
U.S. Geological Survey, National Earthquake Information Center World Data Center for Seismology, Denver
A strong earthquake occurred at 08:56:01 (UTC) on Saturday, October 23, 2004.
The magnitude 6.9 event has been located in NEAR THE WEST COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN.
(This event has been reviewed by a seismologist.)
Saturday, October 23, 2004 at 08:56:01 (UTC) = Coordinated Universal Time
Saturday, October 23, 2004 at 5:56:01 PM = local time at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
85 km (50 miles) SSW of Niigata, Honshu, Japan
85 km (50 miles) NE of Nagano, Honshu, Japan
90 km (55 miles) NNW of Maebashi, Honshu, Japan
190 km (120 miles) NNW of TOKYO, Japan
The Islands of Japan lie on a ring of seismically active plate boundaries that surround the Pacific Ocean known as the Ring of Fire. Earthquakes throughout Japan are caused by the relative motion of several major and minor tectonic plates including the Pacific plate, the Philippine Sea plate, the Okhotsk plate, and the Amur plate. Earthquakes result from slippage on the interface between the plates and on faults some distance from the plates boundaries. This thrust earthquake, of October 23rd 2004, occurred within the Okhotsk plate about 350 km east of the Japan Trench where the Pacific plate subducts beneath the overriding Okhotsk plate.
Within the last 30 years, there have been several significant earthquakes in region nearby this earthquake. These include a June, 1964 magnitude 7.4 quake that occurred 125 km to the north and killed 36 people and an April, 1995 magnitude 5.4 quake that occurred 90 km to the north and injured at least 39 people. This century, the country of Japan has suffered nine devastating earthquakes that have killed more than 1000 people. These include the 1923 magnitude 7.9 earthquake that triggered the great Tokyo fire and killed 143,000 people and the more recent 1995 6.9 Kobe earthquake that killed 5,500 people.