词条 | 1953 North Kyushu flood | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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}}{{Infobox flood | name = 1953 North Kyushu flood | duration = {{start date|1953|06|25|df=y}}-{{end date|1953|06|29|df=y}} | affected = Fukuoka Prefecture, Saga Prefecture, Kumamoto Prefecture, Ōita Prefecture and other regions of Northern Kyushu | cause = Cloudburst due to East Asian rainy season | fatalities = 759 | damages = 221.7 billion yen (Market price in 1953) }} The 1953 North Kyushu flood was the flood which hit Northern Kyushu, Japan (Fukuoka Prefecture, Saga Prefecture, Kumamoto Prefecture and Ōita Prefecture) in June 1953. The torrential rain of the rainy season, amounting to more than 1,000 mm on Aso and Hikosan mountains, produced the great flood to many rivers such as Chikugo River and the toll of more than 1,000 people dead and missing. 450,000 houses were flooded and 1,000,000 people suffered from the flood. The fundamental change of flood control in the Kyushu area was needed and the standards of flood control have been taken against further floods. Name of the floodThe name of the flood remains unsettled. In Kumamoto Prefecture, Shirakawa Great Flood or 6.26 Flood is usually used, while the name of the flood differs from literature to literature. In Kitakyushu city, they use「北九州大水害」or North Kyushu Great Flood. In the Japanese Wikipedia article,「昭和28年西日本水害」(1953, Nishinippon Flood) is used, based on the decision of the Western Japan Branch of the Japan Society of Civil Engineers. In this article, 1953 North Kyushu Flood is used, based on the areas of the flood. WeatherIn the early part of June 1953, a rainy season front (baiyu zensen) stayed in the middle of Kyushu causing heavy rain, which went southward to Amami Oshima. On the other hand, a Pacific anticyclone present in the Philippines pressed the rainy season front to the Tsushima Strait. At the same time, an anticyclone from China moved to Kyushu pressing the front to Yakushima. The rainy season front was pressed both from west and south, and stayed in the Mountain Aso around June 23, and the front was stimulated by the high temperature air from the anticyclones. Low-pressure areas passed in succession from Korea and Tsushima, which usually would have stayed in Yakushima. Flood{{Empty section|date=July 2010}}Flood in Kumamoto, 6.26 Great Flood[1]
[https://web.archive.org/web/20110723034834/http://www.qsr.mlit.go.jp/tateno/damujigyo/shirakawa-aramashi.html#_02 Shirakawa Suigai in Japanese] Flood in Fukuoka Prefecture:Chikugogawa AreaThe Chikugo River (筑後川, Chikugo-gawa) flows through Kumamoto, Oita, Fukuoka and Saga prefectures in Japan. With a total length of 143 kilometres(89 mi), it is the longest river on Kyushu. It flows from Mount Aso and empties into the Ariake Sea. The river is important to industry, with twenty electrical power plants located along its banks, as well as the major city of Kurume in Fukuoka Prefecture.
Amounts of Precipitation
DamageThe Japanese Government took appropriate measures comparable with those took for typhoons in 1948. The 5th Yoshida Cabinet (Government) placed " Nishinihon (West Japan) flood countermeasure center" in Fukuoka City. Not only National Safety Forces(which later became Land Force), but also American soldiers helped. The people in the flooded areas greatly appreciated the supply of free food and water, while they thought the flood was a natural disaster and could not be helped. The damage published by the National Regional Police Fukuoka Center
Countermeasures1953 was the year of great disasters; the heavy rain in the south Kishu area, Wakayama Prefecture, with 1,046 people dead and missing and in the Minami Yamashiro area(105 people were killed). The causes were attributed to reckless deforestation, and the lack of water control after the second world war. The damaged Yoake Dam was investigated but the inadequate water control of the upper river was found to blame. The Japanese Government decided to follow America and its Tenessey Valley Corporation and started to build many dams such as, Matsubara Dam, Shimauch Tsutsumi (Chikugo River), Shimouke Dam (Tsue River), Ooishi, Harazuru, Sennenbunsuiro (Chikugo River), Chikugoooseki, Terauchi Dam (Sa ta River), Ishiharagawa Dam, Ooishi Dam, Jouharagawa Dam, Hyugakami Dam, Masubuchi Dam, Aburagi Dam, and Jin-ya Dam. In 2009, the countermeasures were again under review in view of the global warming and heat island phenomenon and the outbreaks of heavy rainfall in Northern Kyushu in 2009. See also
Notes1. ^{{Cite web |url=http://www.qsr.mlit.go.jp/tateno/damujigyo/shirakawa-aramashi.html |title=Shirakawa Suigai in Japanese |access-date=2010-12-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723034834/http://www.qsr.mlit.go.jp/tateno/damujigyo/shirakawa-aramashi.html#_02 |archive-date=2011-07-23 |dead-url=yes |df= }} 2. ^50 years have passed after the 6.26 Shirakawa Flood. Kumamoto Nichinichi Shimbun, 2003. p.61 References
5 : Floods in Japan|Weather events in Japan|1953 in Japan|1953 natural disasters|1953 floods |
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