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Japan's 2011 Earthquake Moved the Entire Country 6 Millimeters Eastward: A Seismic Phenomenon Never Seen Before

19/06/2026 19:06 - Tecnologia

Visualización artística del interior de la Tierra con ondas sísmicas viajando desde Japón hacia el núcleo externo y rebotando de vuelta. Capas terrestres en diferentes colores (corteza marrón, manto naranja, núcleo externo amarillo brillante). Flechas curvas mostrando el recorrido de la onda. Estilo científico-educativo moderno y limpio.

On Friday, March 11, 2011, at 2:46 PM local time, a massive magnitude 9.1 earthquake struck off the coast of Honshu, Japan's main island. This seismic event —known as the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami— became the strongest earthquake ever recorded in Japanese history and the third most powerful worldwide since 1900. The epicenter was located in the Pacific Ocean, approximately 130 kilometers (80 miles) east of Sendai, a major city in the Tōhoku region.

The resulting tsunami, with waves reaching staggering heights of up to 40 meters (130 feet), devastated coastal communities and triggered the infamous Fukushima nuclear disaster. The tragedy claimed nearly 20,000 lives and remains one of the deadliest natural disasters in modern history.

What Makes This Discovery So Remarkable?

For over a decade, scientists believed they understood the full scope of the 2011 disaster. But new research published in the prestigious journal Science has revealed an astonishing phenomenon: approximately 15 minutes after the main earthquake, GPS stations across Japan detected that the entire archipelago had shifted uniformly eastward by 5 to 6 millimeters.

The Science Behind the Discovery

The research was led by geophysicist Sunyoung Park from the University of Chicago, in collaboration with renowned seismologists Hiroo Kanamori (Caltech) and Luis Rivera (University of Strasbourg). Their findings reveal a mechanism never before documented:

Step 1: The Descent

The earthquake generated a powerful shear wave (known as the ScS phase) that traveled deep into the Earth's interior, descending toward the planet's core.

Step 2: The Bounce

When the wave reached the Earth's outer core —a liquid layer of metallic alloy located about 2,900 km (1,800 miles) deep— it reflected completely and began its journey back to the surface.

Why Didn't We Know This Before?

Traditional seismic sensors are designed to detect high-frequency signals from nearby earthquakes. This newly discovered phenomenon involves low-frequency waves that travel enormous distances through the planet's interior. The total round-trip journey covered approximately 5,800 kilometers (3,600 miles).

Simplified explanation: Shear waves (S-waves) cannot travel through liquids. When these waves encounter the liquid outer core, they cannot pass through it, so they reflect back toward the surface like a ball bouncing off a wall.

Understanding Japan's Unique Geology

Japan sits in one of the most geologically active zones on Earth. The country is located at the intersection of four major tectonic plates: the Pacific Plate, the Philippine Sea Plate, the Eurasian Plate, and the Okhotsk Plate. This configuration, called a "double subduction zone," means multiple plates are simultaneously diving beneath each other, creating enormous stress that periodically releases as earthquakes.

Record-Breaking Scale

The researchers determined that this phenomenon affected an area spanning approximately 3,000 kilometers (1,860 miles) —making it the largest lateral seismic event ever documented. For context, this is 6 to 7 times larger than the original earthquake's rupture length.

Measurement Value
Country's displacement 5-6 mm eastward
Time delay after main quake 13-16 minutes
Wave travel distance ~5,800 km (round trip)
Affected area ~3,000 km
Earthquake magnitude 9.1
Casualties Nearly 20,000
Tsunami maximum height 40 meters (130 feet)

Global Implications for Seismic Safety

This discovery fundamentally changes how scientists understand earthquake hazards. Sunyoung Park emphasized: "This indicates that large earthquakes can influence fault zones even after the main shaking has ended. This adds a completely new dimension to seismic hazard assessment that we weren't aware of before."

Key Takeaways:

  1. Delayed triggering: Seismic waves traveling through deep Earth can activate fault zones minutes or even hours after the main earthquake subsides.
  2. Monitoring gaps: Conventional sensors may miss these deep-wave phenomena, potentially underestimating seismic risks in vulnerable regions.
  3. Special risk zones: Areas with complex plate boundary interactions —such as Japan, Mexico, Turkey, Indonesia, and Chile— face heightened exposure to these cascading effects.
Other Effects from the 2011 Earthquake

The Tōhoku earthquake was so powerful that it had measurable effects on the entire planet:

  • Honshu island moved up to 2.4 meters (8 feet) toward the Pacific Ocean.
  • Earth's rotation axis shifted approximately 17 centimeters (7 inches).
  • The day became slightly shorter by redistributing Earth's mass.

A New Chapter in Earthquake Science

What makes this finding so significant is that it reveals earthquakes don't simply "end" when the shaking stops. The energy released continues to interact with the planet's interior, traveling thousands of kilometers before returning to the surface with measurable consequences. For a country like Japan, which experiences roughly 1,500 earthquakes annually (though most are minor), understanding these complex dynamics is crucial for public safety.

Sources

El País | Infobae | ABC

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