
KOBE EARTHQUAKE, JANUARY 1995
Where did it happen?
The focus of the earthquake was located 16 km beneath its epicenter, which was the northern end of Awaji Island, 20 km away from the city of Kobe, which had a population of 1.5 million at the time. This area is located right in the middle of the fault zone between the Pacific, the Eurasian and the Philippine tectonic plates.
Kobe is a bustling city in southern Japan. It’s one of Japan’s biggest ports and an important center of industry. Although earthquakes do shake Japan regularly, Kobe had not been hit with some big earthquake for quite some time, that is, until 17 January 1995, 5.46 a.m. in the morning.
Why did the earthquake happen here?
Three tectonic plates meet near to the coast of Japan. Close to Kobe, the denser oceanic Philippines Plate was being subducted beneath the lighter continental Eurasian Plate at a rate of about 10 centimetres per year.
The Japanese island arc was formed from the molten magma released by the melting Philippines Plate. Earthquakes are very common here and happen often because of the friction accumulated from the two plates colliding along this destructive margin. (In 1923, the Great Kanto Earthquake killed 140,000 people in this area. It was the deadliest quake to have hit Japan before Kobe.)
The great destruction which resulted from the 1995 Kobe Earthquake was due to the shallow depth of the focus which was only of about 16 km below the surface, and that the epicentre had occurred close to a very heavily populated area. Seismic shockwaves travelled from Awaji Island (the epicentre) along the Nojima Fault to the cities of Kobe and Osaka.
Collapse of infrastructure
The earthquake caused massive damage to all transport facilities. Several sections of motorway, many of which were built above the ground on tall concrete stilts, collapsed or toppled sideways. This resulted in making the Hanshin Expressway, the raised main road linking Kobe to Osaka, keel over on its side. Railway lines were buckled and many stations were damaged.
Worse still, a 130 km section of the 'bullet train' rail network had to be closed. At the port, cranes tilted or fell and out of 150 quays, 120, where ships were moored at, were destroyed. Port buildings and , cranes tilted or fell and out of 150 quays, 120, where ships were moored at, were destroyed. Port buildings and their contents were partly destroyed in many areas.
Damage by fire
Many of the older, wooden houses completely collapsed. Fires, triggered by gas leaks and sparks from severed electrical cables, caused even more damage, destroying at least 7,500 wooden homes. Office blocks built in the 1960's of steel and concrete frequently collapsed in the middle so that a whole floor was crushed but the rooms above and below remained intact. Some 190,000 buildings in total were destroyed despite the fact that many were presumed earthquake-proof.
An additional obstacle hindering the reconstruction and repair operations was that most people in Kobe had no insurance due to the difficulties of insuring such an earthquake prone area.
Landslide
Buildings were left hanging over the head scrap of a landslide of decomposed bedrock that was set off by the earthquake. Several homes were buried and over 30 people got killed by landslide. At least 28 more people were killed by a landslide that occurred at Nishinomiya.
Sources:
www.Wikipedia.com (info.)
http://vathena.arc.nasa.gov/curric/land/kobe.html (pictures)
http://www.georesources.co.uk/kobehigh.htm (more info.)
Done By:
Sing Hau
Leslie
Kenneth
Leon
Barry
Where did it happen?
The focus of the earthquake was located 16 km beneath its epicenter, which was the northern end of Awaji Island, 20 km away from the city of Kobe, which had a population of 1.5 million at the time. This area is located right in the middle of the fault zone between the Pacific, the Eurasian and the Philippine tectonic plates.
Kobe is a bustling city in southern Japan. It’s one of Japan’s biggest ports and an important center of industry. Although earthquakes do shake Japan regularly, Kobe had not been hit with some big earthquake for quite some time, that is, until 17 January 1995, 5.46 a.m. in the morning.
Why did the earthquake happen here?
Three tectonic plates meet near to the coast of Japan. Close to Kobe, the denser oceanic Philippines Plate was being subducted beneath the lighter continental Eurasian Plate at a rate of about 10 centimetres per year.
The Japanese island arc was formed from the molten magma released by the melting Philippines Plate. Earthquakes are very common here and happen often because of the friction accumulated from the two plates colliding along this destructive margin. (In 1923, the Great Kanto Earthquake killed 140,000 people in this area. It was the deadliest quake to have hit Japan before Kobe.)
The great destruction which resulted from the 1995 Kobe Earthquake was due to the shallow depth of the focus which was only of about 16 km below the surface, and that the epicentre had occurred close to a very heavily populated area. Seismic shockwaves travelled from Awaji Island (the epicentre) along the Nojima Fault to the cities of Kobe and Osaka.
Collapse of infrastructure
The earthquake caused massive damage to all transport facilities. Several sections of motorway, many of which were built above the ground on tall concrete stilts, collapsed or toppled sideways. This resulted in making the Hanshin Expressway, the raised main road linking Kobe to Osaka, keel over on its side. Railway lines were buckled and many stations were damaged.

Worse still, a 130 km section of the 'bullet train' rail network had to be closed. At the port, cranes tilted or fell and out of 150 quays, 120, where ships were moored at, were destroyed. Port buildings and , cranes tilted or fell and out of 150 quays, 120, where ships were moored at, were destroyed. Port buildings and their contents were partly destroyed in many areas.
Damage by fire
Many of the older, wooden houses completely collapsed. Fires, triggered by gas leaks and sparks from severed electrical cables, caused even more damage, destroying at least 7,500 wooden homes. Office blocks built in the 1960's of steel and concrete frequently collapsed in the middle so that a whole floor was crushed but the rooms above and below remained intact. Some 190,000 buildings in total were destroyed despite the fact that many were presumed earthquake-proof.
An additional obstacle hindering the reconstruction and repair operations was that most people in Kobe had no insurance due to the difficulties of insuring such an earthquake prone area.
Landslide
Buildings were left hanging over the head scrap of a landslide of decomposed bedrock that was set off by the earthquake. Several homes were buried and over 30 people got killed by landslide. At least 28 more people were killed by a landslide that occurred at Nishinomiya.
Sources:
www.Wikipedia.com (info.)
http://vathena.arc.nasa.gov/curric/land/kobe.html (pictures)
http://www.georesources.co.uk/kobehigh.htm (more info.)
Done By:
Sing Hau
Leslie
Kenneth
Leon
Barry