(James Whitlow Delano) After the Tohoku earthquake spawned a tsunami which tore through northeastern Japan on March 11, 2011, photographer James Whitlow Delano ... The mounds on the left and far right ...
OFUNATO, Iwate -- A photographer in this northeast Japan city, where a major forest fire recently destroyed over 100 homes, ...
See incredible footage of the tsunami swamping cities and turning buildings into rubble. All across northern Japan they felt it. A violent, magnitude 9-point-zero earthquake on March 11 ...
Scenes of devastation from the Tohoku region stunned the world after the tsunami generated by the Great East Japan Earthquake ... “Before and after” aerial photos taken by The Asahi Shimbun ...
The Japan Meteorological Agency immediately issued tsunami warnings along the coastal regions of western Japan and the first waves were reported just 10 minutes later. These arresting images were ...
Along the coast of Japan’s Iwate prefecture, where a tsunami swept away entire communities on March 11, 2011, a single tree remains as a symbol of endurance. Known as the Miracle Pine ...
People across Japan bowed their heads and prayed on March 11 for the victims of the Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami that devastated northeastern Japan 14 years ago. Prime Minister Shigeru ...
The "Miracle Pine," the only tree that survived in a coastal forest flattened by the deadly tsunami in March 2011 in northeastern Japan, is pictured in Rikuzentakata, Iwate Prefecture, on March 11 ...
However, on March 11, 2011, the Great East Japan Earthquake unleashed a devastating tsunami that irrevocably altered the landscape and the hotel’s fate. The tsunami, with waves reaching heights ...
Japan’s Miyagi prefecture ... can no longer be seen with the rapid development of tsunami safe infrastructure. However, with photos showing what life was once like in Minamisanriku ...
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