A LANDSLIDE COVERS houses in Joetsu, Niigata prefecture, north of Tokyo, Tuesday. The landslide believed to be caused by water from melted snow has grown to about 1,640 feet in length and 492 feet in width, destroying 11 houses by Tuesday. No casualties were reported but 80 residents in 21 households were ordered to evacuate, Kyodo News reported.

A LANDSLIDE COVERS houses in Joetsu, Niigata prefecture, north of Tokyo, Tuesday. The landslide believed to be caused by water from melted snow has grown to about 1,640 feet in length and 492 feet in width, destroying 11 houses by Tuesday. No casualties were reported but 80 residents in 21 households were ordered to evacuate, Kyodo News reported.

TOKYO — A series of earthquakes rattled Tokyo and northeast Japan late today evening but caused no apparent damage or injury in the same region hit by last year’s devastating tsunami.

The strongest tremor, off Hokkaido island, was 6.8 magnitude and caused tidal changes that prompted some communities to issue evacuation orders or tsunami advisories to residents nearest the coast.

A swelling of 8 inches was observed in the port of Hachinohe in Aomori, northern Japan, about one hour later. Smaller changes were reported in several locations on Hokkaido island and Aomori prefecture.

The Japan Meteorological Agency lifted all tsunami advisories about an hour and half later.

The earthquake felt in Tokyo was magnitude 6.1 and centered just off the coast of Chiba, east of Tokyo, at a rather shallow 6 miles below the sea surface.

The town of Otsuchi in Iwate prefecture, where more than 800 died in last year’s tsunami, issued an evacuation order to coastal households as a precaution after the 6.8 quake, said prefectural disaster management official Shinichi Motoyama. No damage or injury was reported, he said.

Iwate was heavily damaged by last year’s earthquake and tsunami. Thousands of aftershocks have shaken the region since then, nearly all of them of minor or moderate strength.

The magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011 left some 19,000 people dead or missing.

Japan marked the first anniversary of the disasters on Sunday, as the country still struggles to rebuild.


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