2011年4月26日火曜日

20110426


Japan's terrifying day saw unprecedented exposed fuel rods

Makoto Nagai was sitting in his third-floor office at 2:46 p.m. on March 11 when the earthquake alarm buzzed. An orange LCD screen flashed 100 and 4, telling him the number of seconds before a category 4 quake would hit the city of Sendai on Japan's northeast coast. The intensity warning quickly jumped to 6, said Nagai, 55, head of the emergency response team in Sendai, located 129 kilometers (80 miles) west of the epicenter of what became the strongest quake in Japan's recorded history. "I stood up, and my coffee cup bounced sideways off my desk," he said. "We were in an earthquake-resistant building yet an internal wall and bookshelves collapsed. Then people started to scream." (Bloomberg)

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