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EngagE with rEal pEoplE, rEal placEs, and rEal data





                   Integrated Central Case Studies highlight the real people, real places, and real data behind
                   environmental issues. The Integrated Central Case Studies provide contextual framework to make
                   science memorable and engaging.







                                                                              NEW! 30% of the Central Case Studies
                                                                              in the book are entirely new. New case studies
                                                                              focus on hydraulic fracturing (Ch07), sustainable
                                                                              agriculture (Ch09), wildlife conservation (Ch12),
                                                                              air pollution (Ch17), oil sands extraction (Ch19),
                                                                              and more!










                                                            CENTRAL CASE STUDYCENTRAL CASE STUDY


                                                            The Tohoku Earthquake:
                                                            Has It Shaken the World’s Trust
                                                            in Nuclear Power?


                                                      NORTH
                                                      KOREA                                     “This used to be one of the best places for a
                 Central Case Studies draw                      Sea of Japan                    business. I’m amazed at how little is left.”
                                                                (East Sea)
                                                                                        Fukushima  — Takahiro Chiba, surveying the devastated
                 students into the chapter             SOUTH                            Daiichi  downtown area of Ishinomaki, Japan, where his
                                                       KOREA                  JAPAN              family’s sushi restaurant was located
                 with engaging topics                                                           “Fukushima should not just contain lessons
                                                                                                for Japan, but for all 31 countries with nuclear
                 that begin and are woven                                                       power.”
                                                                         North Pacific          — Tatsujiro Suzuki, Vice-chairman, Japan Atomic
                 throughout each chapter.                                 Ocean                  Energy Commission


                                                            At 2:46 p.m. on March 11, 2011, the land along the northeast-  as strong ocean surges followed the 1923 Tokyo–Yokohama
                                                            ern coast of the Japanese island of Honshu began to shake   earthquake, pushing walls of debris in front of them and drown-
                                                            violently—and continued to shake for six minutes. These trem-  ing victims still trapped in the wreckage from the earthquake.
                                                            ors were caused when a large section of the seafloor along   The Japanese had built seawalls to protect against tsunamis,
                                                            a fault line 125 km (77 mi) offshore suddenly lurched, releas-  but the Tohoku quake caused the island of Honshu to sink, lower-
                                                            ing huge amounts of energy through the crust and generating   ing the height of the seawalls by up to 2 m (6.5 ft) in some locations.
                                                            an earthquake of magnitude 9.0 on the Richter scale (a scale   Waves reaching up to 15 m (49 ft) in height then overwhelmed
                                                            used to measure the strength of earthquakes). Little did any-  these defenses (Figure 2.1). The raging water swept up to 9.6
                                                            one know at the time that this quake would initiate a series of   km (6 mi) inland, scoured buildings from their foundations, and
                                                            events that would affect not only Japan, but also the future of
                                                            nuclear power around the world.
                                                    New topographical maps help students see the political and
                                                              The Tohoku earthquake, as it was later named, was not the
                                                                                             Figure 2.1 Tsunami waves overtop a seawall following the
                                                            first major earthquake to strike Japan. The city of Kobe experi-
                                                    environmental context of stories.        Tohoku earthquake in 2011. The tsunami caused a greater loss
                                                            enced substantial damage from a quake in 1995 that claimed
                                                                                             of life and property than the earthquake that generated it and led
                                                            over 5500 lives. And in 1923, an earthquake devastated the   to a meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
                                                              cities of Tokyo and Yokohama, resulting in over 142,000 deaths.
                                                            Losses of life and property from the Tohoku quake were far
                                                            less extensive than the losses from these earlier events, thanks
                                                            to new stringent building codes that enable buildings to resist
                                                            crumbling and toppling over during earthquakes. But even when
             693                                            the earth stopped shaking, the residents of northeastern Japan
                                                            knew that further danger might still await them—from a tsunami.
                                                              A tsunami (“harbor wave” in English) is a powerful surge
                                                            of seawater generated when an offshore earthquake displaces
                                                            large volumes of rocks and sediment on the ocean bottom,
                                                            suddenly pushing the overlying ocean water upward. This
                                                            upward movement of water creates waves that speed outward
                                                            from the earthquake site in all directions. These waves are
           WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd   2                                                                                          12/07/13   2:39 PM
                                                            hardly noticeable at sea, but can rear up to staggering heights
                                                            when they enter the shallow waters near shore and can sweep
                                                        22  inland with great force. The fear of a tsunami was well founded,
                                                     M02_WITH7428_05_SE_C02.indd   22                                            04/07/13   1:40 PM
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