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  2. Sea of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_of_Japan

    The Sea of Japan (see below for other names) is the marginal sea between the Japanese archipelago, Sakhalin, the Korean Peninsula, and the mainland of the Russian Far East. The Japanese archipelago separates the sea from the Pacific Ocean. Like the Mediterranean Sea, it has almost no tides due to its nearly complete enclosure from the Pacific ...

  3. Geography of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Japan

    The Sea of Japan was considered to be a frozen inner lake because of the lack of the warm Tsushima Current. Various plants and large animals, such as Palaeoloxodon naumanni, migrated into the Japanese archipelago. [76] The Sea of Japan was a landlocked sea when the land bridge of East Asia existed circa 18,000 BCE. During the glacial maximum ...

  4. Geology of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_Japan

    Around 23 million years ago, western Japan was a coastal region of the Eurasia continent. The subducting plates, being deeper than the Eurasian plate, pulled parts of Japan which become modern Chūgoku region and Kyushu eastward, opening the Sea of Japan (simultaneously with the Sea of Okhotsk) around 15-20 million years ago, with likely freshwater lake state before the sea has rushed in. [4 ...

  5. Eastern margin of the Sea of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_margin_of_the_Sea...

    The eastern margin of the Sea of Japan is a zone of concentrated geological strain which extends several hundred kilometers and north–south along the eastern margin of the Sea of Japan. The margin has undergone convergence tectonics since the end of the Pliocene. [1] [2] It is believed to be an incipient subduction zone which defines the ...

  6. Japanese archipelago - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_archipelago

    The Japanese archipelago (Japanese: 日本列島, Nihon Rettō) is an archipelago of 14,125 islands that form the country of Japan. [1] It extends over 3,000 km (1,900 mi) [2] from the Sea of Okhotsk in the northeast to the East China and Philippine seas in the southwest along the Pacific coast of the Eurasian continent, and consists of three island arcs from north to south: the Northeastern ...

  7. Climate of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_of_Japan

    Japan's varied geographical features divide it into six principal climatic zones. Hokkaido belongs to the humid continental climate, with long, very cold winters and warm, cool summers. Precipitation is sparse; however, winter brings large snowfalls of hundreds of inches in areas such as Sapporo and Asahikawa. In the Sea of Japan, the northwest ...

  8. Sea of Japan naming dispute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_of_Japan_naming_dispute

    A dispute exists over the international name for the body of water which is bordered by Japan, Korea (North and South) and Russia. In 1992, objections to the name Sea of Japan were first raised by North Korea and South Korea at the Sixth United Nations Conference on the Standardization of Geographical Names. [1]

  9. Portal:Japan/Geography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Japan/Geography

    Japan/Geography. Japan is an island nation in East Asia comprising a large stratovolcanic archipelago extending along the Pacific coast of Asia. The country is north-northeast of China and Taiwan (separated by the East China Sea) and slightly east of Korea (separated by the Sea of Japan ). Its primary islands are Hokkaidō, Honshū (the ...