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- Hōei - Wikipedia
Hōei (宝永; Kyujitai: 寶永) was a Japanese era name (年号, nengō; "year name") after Genroku and before Shōtoku This period spanned the years from March 1704 through April 1711 [1]
- Hōei eruption - Wikipedia
The Hōei quake caused stress and compression of the magma chambers underneath Mount Fuji, leading to the eruption A dike system stretches from the surface of Mount Fuji to 20 km into the subsurface
- Hōei eruption — Grokipedia
The Hōei eruption commenced on December 16, 1707 (Hōei 4 11 23 in the Japanese calendar), with initial explosive activity originating from the southeastern flank of Mount Fuji at approximately 10:00 AM
- Hōei eruption explained
The Hōei eruption of Mount Fuji started on December 16, 1707 (during the Hōei era, 23rd day of the 11th month of the 4th year) and ended on February 24, 1708 It was the last confirmed eruption of Mount Fuji, with three unconfirmed eruptions reported from 1708 to 1854
- Mount Fujis Last Eruption: The 1707 Hōei Event That Buried Edo in Ash
Mount Fuji last erupted on December 16, 1707, in an event known as the Hōei eruption It lasted about 16 days of intense activity, ejecting 800 million cubic meters of ash that blanketed Edo (present-day Tokyo) over 100 kilometers away
- The 1707 Hōei Earthquake: Japan’s Worst Recorded Megaquake and What It . . .
The 1707 Hōei earthquake was Japan’s largest recorded quake until 2011 It ruptured the entire Nankai Trough at once, triggered a massive tsunami, and even caused Mount Fuji to erupt Its legacy shapes modern disaster planning worldwide
- Hōei - Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias
Ère Hōei — L ère Hōei (en japonais: 宝永) est une des ères du Japon (年号, nengō, littéralement « le nom de l année ») suivant l ère Genroku et précédant l ère Shōtoku s étendant du 1704 au 1711
- 1707 Hōei earthquake explained
On 13 February 1708, at 10:00–12:00 JST, a major aftershock with its epicenter off the coast of the Kii Peninsula, occurred This earthquake was strongly felt in Kyoto (according to the "Diary of Miscellaneous Affairs") and Nagoya (as noted in the "Parrot Cage Records"), and it generated a tsunami
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