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the adaptable Word resource
the adaptable Word resource

... A country’s wealth and the effects of an earthquake 3. Comparing your answers to the first two tasks, what is the biggest difference between the effects of the earthquake in Bam in 2003 and a possible earthquake in the future in San Francisco? 4. Investigate a range of earthquakes from around the w ...
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earthquakes - Cowlitz County

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... • Years of plate tectonic activity created pressure along a fault line causing the earthquake. • On March 27, 1964 at 5:36 PM the earthquake began. • The initial seismic waves were so powerful that some buildings as far away as Seattle were swaying. ...
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Disaster in Japan

... Although Japan's industrial centers in the south and west seem to have been spared the worst, the crisis at the damaged nuclear plants north of Tokyo threatened to significantly reduce the amount of electricity available, forcing automakers like Toyota and Honda, as well as electronics giants like ...
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... Map of 1886 offshore intensity center from Bakun and Hopper (2004). Figure shows the offshore location of estimated intensity center (green triangle) for the September 1, 1886, Charleston, South Carolina, earthquake. Red star is the location of a cluster of epicenters of recent small earthquakes nea ...
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Fukushima Earthquake

... • Japan is known to lie on numerous tectonic fault lines  Population is generally well prepared for earthquakes (Evacuation procedures, structures, national aid response, etc.) • Japan has witnessed numerous large earthquakes, however, a country can never be fully prepared for a disaster of this ma ...
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Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant



The Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant (柏崎刈羽原子力発電所, Kashiwazaki-Kariwa genshiryoku-hatsudensho, Kashiwazaki-Kariwa NPP) is a large, modern (housing the world's first ABWR) nuclear power plant on a 4.2-square-kilometer (1,038 acres) site including land in the towns of Kashiwazaki and Kariwa in Niigata Prefecture, Japan on the coast of the Sea of Japan, from where it gets cooling water. The plant is owned and operated by Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO).It was the largest nuclear generating station in the world by net electrical power rating.It was approximately 19 km (12 mi) from the epicenter of the second strongest earthquake to ever occur at a nuclear plant, the Mw 6.6 July 2007 Chūetsu offshore earthquake. This shook the plant beyond design basis and initiated an extended shutdown for inspection, which indicated that greater earthquake-proofing was needed before operation could be resumed. The plant was completely shut down for 21 months following the earthquake. Unit 7 was restarted after seismic upgrades on May 9, 2009, followed later by units 1, 5, and 6. (Units 2, 3, 4 were not restarted).After the April 2011 earthquake, all restarted units were shut down and safety improvements are being carried out. As of May 2015 no units are restarted and no units are expected to restart sooner than the end of 2015.
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