Kamaishi Japan
Kamaishi Japan
Meeting Jaan's mother for first time. They seeing their grandson for firs time.
thelivingdreams.com
Tsunami at Kamaishi port, Iwate Prefecture
The 311 Tsunami at Kamaishi port in Iwate Prefecture, Japan.
Notes:
This video is somehow unique, since it shows the actual comings and goings of the tsunami and not just the arrival of the biggest wave. It starts a couple of minutes after the earthquake, probably somewhere around 2:50 and 2:55 pm and then goes on for at least one and a half hour, plus some footage of the night and the next day.
You can see how the water level falls in the minutes after the earthquake, the sign of an approaching tsunami. Then around 18:00 the tsunami begins to flood the port. The most impressive footage occurs during the two minutes after 24:00, then the tsunami overcomes the seawalls and smashes with incredible force into the city.
The building from which this video was shot can be seen on a NHK video which was shown often on TV:
It's behind the road bridge, on the right side. The building with the pyramid shaped tower. The video was probably shot out of this tower.
At the entrance of the bay, a large structure can be seen. That structure is the Kamaishi Breakwater. It was intended to save the town from tsunamis and took 30 years to build until being completed in 2009. In 2010 it got its own entry in the Guinness Book of World Records, for it was the deepest breakwater on the planet.
At 18:00 the waves begin flowing over the breakwater and for the next ten minutes it disappears in foam. When it reappears at 34:00 it is torn apart - it took Mother Nature merely ten minutes to smash something which took humans 30 years to build.
Still it probably wasn't completely useless. Kamaishi was inundated in water up to 38 feet / 11.5 metres high, but that was behind the breakwater. In front of the breakwater, the water reached up to 100 feet / 30.5 metres.
Ryoishi, a little fishing village further north Kamaishi Bay, which was not protected by the breakwater, got destroyed by waves up to 64 feet / 19.5 metres high.
So the breakwater probably absorbed some of the tsunami's energy and deflected some more to the north side of the bay, which effectively halved the tsunami's height in Kamaishi city. Unfortunately that doesn't help at all if you're confronted with a monster tsunami, which even with its height halved is still higher than your defenses.
Video recorded by Kamaishi Port Office, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. Provided by EERI member Shunsuke Otani.
Exploring North Japan by Car! ????????????Northern Japan Travel Guide
The start of a 4 day journey across the Northern Japan prefectures of Iwate and Aomori! Today we stop by Tono, Kamaishi and finish up with a stay at a traditional Japanese hotel in Jodogahama.
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Chris
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Yamayuri
Shokuniku Center
Kamaishi Daikannon
The Park Hotel Jodogahama
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Kamaishi Japan Sports Journey
Justin Harrison has come to Kamaishi! Iwate Prefecture is famous for being a prosperous rugby prefecture, especially Kamaishi, a town where rugby has become so traditional that it has been declared a “Rugby Town”! Justin met a lot of rugby fans, and also enjoyed sake and delicious meals.
Views of devastation in Kamaishi, Japan following 1933 Sanriku Earthquake which c...HD Stock Footage
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Views of devastation in Kamaishi, Japan following 1933 Sanriku Earthquake which caused great loss of life and property
Damage due to earthquake, tsunami, and fire in Kamaishi, Japan as a result of the Sanriku Earthquake. People gather in the devastated area. Wrecked and burned homes and boats. Children looking picking through rubble on the ground. Damaged houses and buildings. Smoke rising in the area. One large boat washed up against a building. Two smaller boats seen washed ashore. Location: Kamaishi Japan. Date: March 2, 1933.
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Through the Tsunami: World Class Kamaishi Sanriku Kaihōdzuke!
The name meaning literally Sanriku sea treasure pickles, Sanriku Kaihōdzuke is a Japanese delicacy by two chef brothers.
This specially pickled mix of abalone, thick wakame seaweed, and salmon roe is an ideal compliment to rice, the most prized of all traits for Japanese food.
Despite taking losses adding up to US$ millions in last year's tsunami, production is back to former levels.
Tōhoku Revival Calendar article:
Video 2013 09 21 - Kamaishi Disaster Prevention Center
The disaster prevention building in Kamaishi that everyone was instructed to run to in case of a disaster like a tsunami.
Hundreds of families, children, and adults ran to this building... over 300 of them came here to take sanctuary from the tsunami.
Little did anyone know that this tsunami was going to be too big for this building to protect them from...When the tsunami hit the building only 20 of the 300+ people who ran for safety survived.
RIP to all those who passed away.
What Happened In Japan After The Tsunami?
In March 2011 a devastating tsunami destroyed the coastline of north Japan. These are the stories of five people living in the shadow of the recovery and how they're breathing new life into the region.
►► The Amazing People Featured in this Video
1) The Questrel Guitar
ケストレル(ギター)公式サイト
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2) Damborghini Official Website
(ダンボルギーニ公式サイト)
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3.Fisherman Japan Official Webisite
(フィッシャーマン・ジャパン公式サイト)
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4) K-Port
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A great article about K-Port
(Rocket NewsのK-Portに関する記事)
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5) Kesennuma travel guide
(気仙沼観光コンベンション協会)
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Check out Nishant's blog
(ニシャントのブログ)
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6) Minshuku (Farmer's guest house) Tsunakan
(つなかん公式サイト)
►
►Miyagi Restoration Information Portal
みやぎ復興情報ポータル
►►
Ultimate Japan Tohoku Experience Part2A
Join Scott and Mayumi as they visit Kamaishi City, Iwate Prefecture in Part 2 of Ultimate Japan's Tohoku Experience. They will visit the Lady Buddha statue, visit two shelters, and interview some of the evacuees.
SpiritofRugby in Tohoku: Kamaishi visit second camera 3
The content is similar to the SpiritofRugby in Tohoku: Kamaishi videos but taken by a different camera and the wind affected the quality of the sound.
SAM NEEDS - Kamaishi Seawaves 2018
Footage of Sam Needs playing for the Kamaishi Seawaves in the Japanese Top Challenge League 2018.
Tighthead prop | Loosehead prop | Hooker
5 years after the Great East Japan Earthquake / Light of hope returns - The Japan News
KAMAISHI, Iwate — Light from a housing complex shines in the dark night. The light comes from a seven-story reinforced-concrete public housing block built for disaster victims from 126 households. The Iwate prefectural government built the complex in an elevated area of Kamaishi’s Heita district, a part of town that was obliterated in the tsunami triggered by the Great East Japan Earthquake. [Released on March. 5, 2016]
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Northern Japan 7 (last) - Ginga SL and Kamaishi
This is the seventh and last video of a trip thru northern Japan. From Ozawa onsen we went by bus to Hanamaki to catch the Ginga SL (steam locomotive train). The afternoon we spent in Kamaishi, a town at the coast which was hit hard by the tsunami in 2011 but is already rebuilt to a large degree. My deepest respect to the people who gave their town a new future. Japan is a great country.
The beautiful music is creative commons downloaded from :
- SOLO ACOUSTIC GUITAR by Jason Shaw
Please see the links below for specific creative commons license details and also to download the music:
5 years after the Great East Japan Earthquake / School bag of a special little one - The Japan News
KAMAISHI, Iwate — Kenichi Suzuki, 72, gently stroked an orange school bag hanging on the wall of the entrance of a temporary house in Kamaishi, Iwate Prefecture, where he lives now.
[Released on March. 2, 2016]
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Tsunami Japan KAMAISHI大津波映像 2011
JAPAN TSUNAMI 3/11 in English: from START to END
Related song of my own making: 3/11 TSUNAMI SONG THIS WAS TOO SHOCKING & MIND-BOGGLING TO BE ON AIR. Face the .
Video recorded by Kamaishi Port Office, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. Provided by EERI member Shunsuke Otani.
Video recorded by Kamaishi Port Office, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. Provided by EERI member Shunsuke Otani.
3/11/2011 Otsuchi Japan Earth Quake & Tsunami Stock Footage Catalog. The following footage was shot in Otsuchi Japan which was completely destroyed by .
Prime Minister's Visit to Iwate Prefecture
Prime Minister Abe went to Iwate Prefecture just before the eighth anniversary of the East Japan Earthquake and observed some sites in the disaster-stricken area that are now undergoing reconstruction.
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Visit to Iwate Prefecture (March 9, 2019)
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Prime Minister's Office of Japan YouTube Channel is operated by the Government of Japan.
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Aftermath of Great East Japan Earthquake/Tsunami - Temporary Strip Mall in Iwaki, Fukushima
Reported in 2011. Residents of Iwaki, Fukushima, try to rebuild their city from the damages caused by the Great East Japan earthquake. They said they are taking one step at a time.
Rare Video: Japan Tsunami | National Geographic
June 9, 2011 — The March 11 earthquake and tsunami left more than 28,000 dead or missing. See incredible footage of the tsunami swamping cities and turning buildings into rubble.
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Rare Video: Japan Tsunami | National Geographic
National Geographic