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  • 30
    Jan
    2013
    5:36pm, EST

    Styrofoam from Japan tsunami causing fears for Alaska wildlife

    By Reuters

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Alaska cleanup crews last year found some beaches covered with polystyrene foam that floated across the Pacific from the 2011 Japanese tsunami and threatens wildlife, a state official told legislators on Tuesday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    A main concern of environmentalists and officials is that the lightweight specks, which have been broken down by storms and waves, will harm small animals. They could choke or die slowly from malnutrition if pieces block their intestinal system, officials say.

    So far, no dead birds have been found on the beaches, Elaine Busse Floyd, acting environmental health director for the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, told lawmakers in her report. But officials are on the lookout for animals harmed by the ingested foam, she said.

    Polystyrene foam accounted for 30 percent of the weight of the total debris, compared to the usual 5 percent rate before the tsunami, she said. Considering that it is so light, "it's a huge volume."


    Closed-cell extruded polystyrene is often referred to as Styrofoam, a trademarked name owned by Dow Chemical Co., which manufactures it for insulation and crafts, among other uses. It is not biodegradable because it resists breaking down in sunlight, so it can in theory last forever.

    Scattered bits of foam are difficult to retrieve from the environment and are easily mistaken by animals for morsels of food, Floyd told a legislative committee in Juneau.

    Animals are already munching on tsunami polystyrene foam, said Chris Pallister, president of the nonprofit Gulf of Alaska Keeper which conducted most of last year's beach cleanups.

    "We have personally seen plenty of animals eating it, pecking at it, playing with it," Pallister said.

    Cleanup crews have spotted foam bits in scat from bears and other animals, he said. "The question is, are animals metabolizing that or is it breaking down and being released into the environment?"

    Pallister's group worked from May to October to clean up about 300 miles (483 km) of beaches in outlying coastal areas. Other groups conducted more short-term cleanup projects.

    Already, Gulf of Alaska Keeper is preparing for next summer's cleanup. "It's a pretty amazing sight when you go out to the coast and see nothing but Styrofoam as far as you can see," he said.

    The material that has washed ashore in Alaska from the 2011 tsunami in Japan includes foam buoys and insulation ripped from people's homes, officials said.

    Debris from the tsunami has also washed ashore in other U.S. states on the Pacific Ocean, including in Washington and Oregon where a Japanese dock turned up on the coast.

    But the problem is particularly acute in Alaska because it has a longer coastline than other states, and many beaches are remote which makes cleanup difficult and expensive, Floyd said. 

    Marine ecologists discuss the living organisms found on the tsunami dock in Washington state and what potential dangers they may pose to native marine life and ecology.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    16 comments

    This Obama groupie R.Emmanuel who is the Mayor of Chicago is an idiot!

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    Explore related topics: alaska, tsunami, environment, japan-tsunami
  • 5
    Jan
    2013
    2:35pm, EST

    Large earthquake strikes off Alaska coast, prompting tsunami warnings

    By Marian Smith, NBC News

    A 7.5-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of Alaska near midnight on Friday, the U.S. Geological Survey said, prompting tsunami warnings and advisories down the coast of Alaska and Canada's British Columbia.

    All tsunami warnings, watches and advisories were later canceled, the West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center (of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) said.

    The Alaska Tsunami Warning Center said the waves were too small to pose a threat, reaching just six inches above normal sea level in places such as Sitka and Port Alexander.

    "Initially, in the first 15 to 20 minutes, there might have been a bit of panic," Sitka Police Chief Sheldon Schmitt told The Associated Press. But he said things calmed down as the town waited for the all clear and the tsunami warning was canceled by 2 a.m., according to the Daily Sitka Sentinel.


    Residents of Sitka gathered at the high school early Saturday, bundled up with pillows in tow, waiting for more information.

    The quake struck in the Pacific Ocean about 60 miles southwest of Port Alexander, Alaska, at a depth of about 6 miles at 11:58 p.m. local time (3:58 a.m. ET), the USGS said.

    Initially, the USGS reported that the temblor had a magnitude of 7.7, but it later downgraded the quake's strength to 7.5.

    Read real-time updates from BreakingNews.com

    A 6-inch rise in sea level was reported in Port Alexander, but there were no early reports of damage.

    A tsunami warning was issued for the coastal areas of British Columbia from the north tip of Vancouver Island to Cape Suckling, but it was later canceled.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "A tsunami was generated by this event but does not pose a threat to these areas," NOAA said in a statement. "Some areas may see small sea level changes. The decision to re-occupy hazard zones must be made by local authorities."

    The NOAA also issued tsunami advisories from the Washington state-British Columbia border to the north tip of Vancouver Island. They were later canceled.

    According to the NOAA, a tsunami warning means "that a tsunami with significant widespread inundation is expected or is already occurring."

    There was no danger of a tsunami hitting Hawaii, according to the NOAA's Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.

    The Associated Press contributed reporting.

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    171 comments

    Wow, heres hoping no one is hurt or worse. Or any damage. There are a lot of people who live on the coast this part of the world.

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    Explore related topics: alaska, quake, earthquake, pacific, tsunami, usgs, featured, tsunami-warning-center
  • 18
    Dec
    2012
    4:50pm, EST

    Tsunami debris? What looked like large dock vanishes off Northwest coast

    U.S. Coast Guard

    What looks like a large dock is seen in a photo provided to the U.S. Coast Guard by crew of the "Lady Nancy" fishing vessel on Friday, Dec. 14.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    The Coast Guard was on the lookout Tuesday for a mysterious object that could be the second dock to make landfall from Japan’s tsunami. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Reported five days ago by a fishing crew, the object hasn't been seen again even though the U.S. Coast Guard and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are looking hard.

    "The dock hasn't been located again since the initial report," NOAA spokeswoman Keeley Belva told NBC News. "We have been doing trajectory models, but given that the first sighting was several days ago, it becomes increasingly challenging to anticipate where and when the dock may show up."


    Crew aboard the "Lady Nancy" sent the U.S. Coast Guard a photograph of the object, saying it was taken about 16 nautical miles northwest of Grays Harbor, Wash.

    The Coast Guard said Monday it was broadcasting an alert to mariners but that after five helicopter searches covering 317 square miles it hadn't spotted the flat, dark object.

    "There could be many factors in why it hasn't been seen," Belva said when asked if it might have sunk. "The weather has been pretty stormy and the seas have been rough. As you can see from the picture, it is hard to see even in better conditions."

    The photo shows an object similar to a Japanese dock that washed ashore in Oregon last June. The 66-foot-long dock is the largest tsunami item to have made it to the West Coast.

    Another dock was seen off Oahu, Hawaii, in September but Belva said it wasn't known if that was Friday's sighting.

    Japan estimates the 2011 tsunami swept about 5 million tons of debris into the Pacific, and that two-thirds of that sank quickly. Some of the remaining 1.5 million tons are heading for West Coast shores.

    Through Last Thursday, NOAA said it had received 1,432 debris reports, of which 17 have been confirmed as definite tsunami debris.

    NOAA asked that anyone sighting the new object or any other large debris report it to DisasterDebris@noaa.gov. 

    The trash accumulating in the Pacific Ocean – scientists estimate there are 1.5 million tons of tsunami debris alone -- is arriving on the West Coast. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

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    8 comments

    Just have the navy or coast guard sink the pile of barnacles. If they can find it. It's in stealth mode you know.

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    Explore related topics: japan, tsunami, debris, environment
  • 14
    Sep
    2012
    1:08pm, EDT

    Tsunami debris adds new element to 'Coastal Cleanup' day

    The trash accumulating in the Pacific Ocean – scientists estimate there are 1.5 million tons of tsunami debris alone -- is arriving on the West Coast. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Thousands of volunteers were taking to West Coast beaches on Saturday for the 27th annual "Coastal Cleanup", and this year they have new instructions: keep an eye out for any Japanese tsunami debris.

    Ocean Conservancy

    This flyer is being handed out Saturday along West Coast beaches.

    "DO NOT touch or attempt to remove any potentially hazardous materials or large debris items," states a field guide prepared by Ocean Conservancy, which organizes the annual, and international, beach event. 

    Instead, volunteers are urged to call 911 if it's an immediate danger, or the federal tsunami removal program by e-mailing information to disasterdebris@noaa.gov. 


    The group also hopes to total up any tsunami debris found, marking those "in the 'Items of Local Concern' section — so we can compare data collected this year to historical numbers," Katie Cline, a spokeswoman for Ocean Conservancy, told NBC News. "Will we see a difference in the type of debris found? This is a question we hope to determine using the data."

    Already this year, several large items from Japan's 2011 tsunami have landed on West Coast beaches — among them a boat found on Canada's Spring Island, northwest of Vancouver Island, in August; a 66-foot-long floating dock that washed onto an Oregon beach in June; and a Harley-Davidson motorcycle found on Canada's Graham Island in April. 

    Japan estimates 5 million tons of debris was swept out to sea by the tsunami, and about 1.5 million tons of that is likely still in the Pacific Ocean.

    Even without tsunami debris, cleanup volunteers are likely to be busy on Saturday.

    Last year, nearly 600,000 people picked up more than 9 million pounds of trash during the cleanup held on 20,000 miles of beaches around the world, Ocean Conservancy said.

    "We need more volunteers than ever," David Pittenger, who runs the group's trash program, said in a statement announcing this year's effort. "Last year, volunteers found enough food packaging to get takeout for breakfast, lunch and dinner every day for the next 858 years."

    Other items disposed of last year included 267,000 articles of clothing and more than 24,000 light bulbs, the conservation group noted.

    One community that already knows what it will be cleaning up Saturday is Encinitas, Calif., where decades-old vehicle parts and other junk were recently found in the water of a protected lagoon, NBCSanDiego.com reported.

    View more videos at: http://nbcsandiego.com.

    To see where cleanups are being held Saturday around the world, check out the interactive map created by Ocean Conservancy at signuptocleanup.org. 

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    13 comments

    What an oppurtunity to go out salvaging. I am certain that there is a wealth of treasure in what is called Tsunami junk. Just think you could find a can or other object with Japanese writing on it that came from another country. You might never get to Japan but you could find something in the afterm …

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    Explore related topics: japan, tsunami, pollution, environment, beaches
  • 3
    Sep
    2012
    9:53pm, EDT

    77-year-old Japanese man asks US mayor to look for items lost in tsunami

    Oregon Parks And Recreation Dept / AP file

    Mitch Vance, left, and Steve Rumrill, with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, inspect the bottom of a section of the Japanese dock that washed up on Agate Beach in Newport, Ore. in early August.

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    The Japanese man’s request wasn’t unreasonable. After all, Japan’s tsunami had already swept a Harley-Davidson and a 66-foot concrete dock to U.S. and Canadian shores.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Still, the mayor of a small Washington state city told The Daily World newspaper that he was surprised when he received a postcard from a 77-year-old man in Japan asking him to look out for items he lost in the tsunami a year and a half ago.

    “This man felt compelled to write us, looking for what he lost,” Mayor Bill Simpson told The Daily World, based in Aberdeen, Wash. Aberdeen, a working-class coastal town known as the birthplace of Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain, welcomes visitors with a sign that reads, “Come As You Are.”


    The postcard was addressed simply, in impeccable cursive, to the mayor’s office in Aberdeen. The letter writer, named Mr. Saito, hails from the Sapporo ward, which is 300 miles north of the epicenter of the 8.9 earthquake that devastated parts of Japan in March 2011.

    Mr. Saito wrote the mayor that he had lost his “collected surveyed amounts’ library cards.”

    “To your seashore areas, have you been observing the floated materials?” Mr. Saito asked. “If you find some, please let me know any news.”

    Harley-Davidson motorcycle swept away by Japan tsunami to be preserved in museum

    In Washington state, the Department of Ecology estimates that 5 million tons of debris was swept into the Pacific Ocean -– 70 percent of which immediately sank.

    That still leaves 1.5 million tons, most of it mundane plastic, Styrofoam and junked refrigerators. The Daily World reported that garbage from one cleanup effort in June filled the beds of 70 pickup trucks.

    The Guardian of London reported that a research vessel that journeyed into the debris this summer returned predicting that it was bound for the West Coast. The garbage plume was dispersed and measured between 1,000 and 2,000 miles wide.

    Rachel La Corte / AP file

    Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire, right, listens as Lynn Albin of the Department of Health describes the Geiger counter readings she's getting from a piece of Styrofoam found on the beach in Ocean Shores, Wash. in June. Officials say that there has been no radiation detected from items that have washed ashore.

    There have been remarkable finds, such as a 20-foot fiberglass boat that washed ashore in Washington, the motorcycle still in its crate from the Miyagi prefecture, the ghost ship that appeared, unmanned and unmoored, off the coast of Alaska. A soccer ball belonging to a teenager whose family had lost everything arrived in Alaska. The ball, on which was written the 16-year-old’s name, had been a gift from his teacher and his classmates when he switched schools seven years ago.

    Rachel La Corte / AP

    Common marine debris from Japan's 2011 tsunami include plastic and Styrofoam.

    The National Oceanic Atmospheric Agency is collecting data on the debris; the agency website says that radiation experts do not believe the debris is radioactive.

    There’s more debris to come, according to The New York Times; oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer said he expects most of the debris to make landfall in October.

    What washes ashore may also serve as a grim reminder of the 3,000 people who went missing in the tsunami, Ebbesmeyer said at a symposium in Port Angeles, Wash., according to the Peninsula Daily News.

    “We’re expecting 100 sneakers with bones in them,” he said. “That may be the only remains that a Japanese family is ever going to have of their people that were lost.”

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    48 comments

    As I walk our beaches now the trash has a whole different meaning. So very sad, it's hard to imagine such a sudden and totally unexpected disaster.

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    Explore related topics: canada, japan, pacific, tsunami, environment, west-coast, commentid-canada
  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    5:10pm, EDT

    Who foots the bill for cleaning up Japan's tsunami debris?

    A 20-foot boat came ashore Friday in Washington state covered in massive barnacles. When invasive, non-native species are suddenly introduced into an eco-system, they can cause an environmental disaster. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    The Japanese tsunami debris washing ashore on West Coast beaches is so far a novelty that has locals talking and tourists visiting, but those sporadic beachings will become more frequent -- and more costly to clean up.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    In addition to removing the debris, and in some cases trying to reunite it with owners in Japan, crews must also deal with the threat of invasive marine species that could threaten local ecosystems if they grab a foothold.

    Oregon's Department of Parks and Recreation learned first hand about the costs when a 66-foot-long dock landed on a beach near Newport last month.


    Oregon Parks and Recreation Department

    A volunteer on June 7 burns marine organisms off a Japanese dock that came ashore near Newport, Ore.

    Volunteers helped burn non-native seaweed and other organisms clinging to the dock, and the department put in $4,300 for machinery. The state on Tuesday also accepted a bid of $84,000 to have the structure removed from the beach. Other bids ranged as high as $240,000.

    "As far as who pays, there is no single budget set aside for it at this point," parks spokesman Chris Havel told msnbc.com. "We are working with the governor's office and federal legislators to try and shield coastal communities from the direct cost as much as we can, but there are no concrete answers yet."

    As for the months ahead, "no one knows how much it could cost, or who will pay," Havel said. For now, the department has to "pay for it up front" with funds budgeted for other items.

    At the federal level, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration awards grants for cleanup of marine debris, but that program was created before the 2011 tsunami and is meant to deal with smaller messes.

    When a large dock that broke away from a Japanese harbor after the tsunami and washed up on an Oregon beach, it brought along millions of organisms. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    Grants have totaled up to $1 million a year recently, NOAA spokeswoman Monica Allen told msnbc.com, but the program isn't accepting new proposals until the fall. 

    Even worse for Oregon, "the program does not award grants for past work done before the award," Allen said.

    In Washington state, Gov. Chris Gregoire on Monday said the state has some funds set aside for tsunami debris cleanup, but it's likely not enough. "We don't have the resources at the state level to do what we're going to have to do here," she said.

    Northwest Public Radio said a state ecology spokesman suggested Washington might even send Japan the bill for cleanups. "That's something that needs to be sorted through," Curt Hart said.

    But the state department later said that comment was misconstrued, and that it referred to the broader issue of how to pay for cleaning up the debris. State officials have never considered asking the Japanese government for funds, the department told msnbc.com.

    NOAA's Allen said the agency is working with communities to "reduce any possible impacts to our natural resources and coastal communities," but she stopped short of saying federal funds were available.

    A basketball that washed away during last year's tsunami in Japan was returned to its rightful place Wednesday. NBC's Michelle Franzen reports.

    "This is an ongoing issue," she said, urging communities to keep an eye on NOAA's marine debris website. 

     

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    225 comments

    it was an act of god. send the bill to him.

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    Explore related topics: washington, tsunami, oregon, debris, environment, coast, featured, miguel-llanos
  • 7
    Jun
    2012
    5:57pm, EDT

    Scraping invasive species from Japanese tsunami dock that washed ashore in Oregon

    Oregon Parks and Recreation / AFP - Getty Images

    This handout photograph obtained courtesy of the Oregon Parks and Recreation (OPRD) and released June 7, 2012 shows a team of about a dozen staff and volunteers organized by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife to remove marine organisms from the dock which landed on Agate Beach, Oregon.

    Oregon Parks and Recreation via AP

    This photo, taken by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department Thursday shows an invasive species commonly known as "wakame" attached to a dock float that washed up on Agate Beach Tuesday near Newport, Ore.

    Miguel Llanos reports on msnbc.com's US News blog that the 66-foot dock is the largest debris to wash ashore in North America from the tsunami:

    A check for any radiation from Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant came up negative, said Oregon Department of Parks and Recreation spokesman Chris Havel.

     The department is overseeing efforts to remove the dock but hasn't decided yet whether to demolish it on site or have it towed off. "You can't preplan for stuff like this," Havel told msnbc.com.

    A starfish native to Japan was found clutching to the structure, Havel said, adding that another concern is to keep out any nonnative species that might have hitched a ride on the dock.

    Read more...

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    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Oregon Parks and Recreation / AFP - Getty Images

    This handout photograph obtained courtesy of the Oregon Parks and Recreation (OPRD) and released on Thursday shows a team member of about a dozen staff and volunteers organized by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife to remove marine organisms from the dock which landed on Agate Beach, Oregon, after drifting at sea following the March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Workers with shovels, rakes and other tools first scraped the structure clean, then briefly used low-pressure torches to sterilize the dock. The material was bagged and hauled up the beach well above the high tide line to store it temporarily.

    Oregon Parks and Recreation / AP

    This photo, taken by the Oregon Park and Recreations Department Thursday, June 7, 2012, shows exotic mussels attached to the dock.

    When a large dock that broke away from a Japanese harbor after the tsunami and washed up on an Oregon beach, it brought along millions of organisms. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: japan, pacific, tsunami, oregon, world-news, us-news
  • 6
    Jun
    2012
    5:55pm, EDT

    Dock becomes largest tsunami debris to arrive from Japan

    A nearly 70-foot-long dock floated onto an Oregon beach after being torn loose from a fishing port in Japan after the tsunami. Mark Hanrahan reports from NBC's Portland, Ore., affiliate.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    A large dock that floated onto an Oregon beach is debris from last year's tsunami in Japan, Japan's consulate in Portland said Wednesday.

    The 66-foot-long dock, which had been in use in an area hit by the March 2011 tsunami, is the largest piece of debris discovered on North America's shores so far. 


    Follow @msnbc_us

    "It’s one of four floating docks washed away by the tsunami, which means there are three more floating somewhere possibly," OregonLive.com quoted Deputy Consul General Hirofumi Murabayashi as saying.

    A check for any radiation from Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant came up negative, said Oregon Department of Parks and Recreation spokesman Chris Havel.

    The department  is overseeing efforts to remove the dock but hasn't decided yet whether to demolish it on site or have it towed off. "You can't preplan for stuff like this," Havel told msnbc.com.


    Oregon Parks and Recreation Dept

    This Japanese dock washed ashore on an Oregon beach Tuesday.

    A starfish native to Japan was found clutching to the structure, Havel said, adding that another concern is to keep out any nonnative species that might have hitched a ride on the dock.

    The dock, which is 19 feet wide and 7 feet high, washed ashore Tuesday on Agate Beach, a mile north of Newport in central Oregon.

    Small groups had already gathered to see the dock and state police were posted to keep people from climbing on it. 

    "I think that's going to change to large crowds," Havel said.

    Some tsunami debris has begun arriving in recent weeks, including a soccer ball that washed up in Alaska and a shipping container holding a Harley-Davidson motorcycle with Japanese license plates that turned up in British Columbia. 

    Debris continues to cross the Pacific, this time from a middle school destroyed by the tsunami. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Most debris is not expected until winter.

    Anyone finding debris thought to be from the tsunami is advised to report it to DisasterDebris@noaa.gov. 

    Buoys, bottles and cans believed to be from the Japan tsunami are surfacing in Washington State, Alaska and British Columbia, and scientists say the mess will be there for generations. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    162 comments

    Racists! That poor starfish is just here trying to do work that American starfish won't do. It should be given amnesty, education for its kids, and all the other social welfare benefits given our starfish.

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    Explore related topics: japan, tsunami, debris, environment, featured, miguel-llanos
  • 25
    May
    2012
    10:13am, EDT

    Harley-Davidson motorcycle swept away by Japan tsunami to be preserved in museum

    Peter Mark / The Canadian Press via AP

    A rust-encrusted Harley-Davidson motorcycle that was swept away by the Japan tsunami in March 2011 was found by Peter Mark in April, washed up on an island off the coast of British Columbia. It's now headed to a Harley museum.

    By James Eng, NBC News

    A Japanese man’s Harley-Davidson motorcycle that washed up on the shores of western Canada more than a year after it was swept away by the devastating tsunami will be preserved in a Harley museum in the U.S.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The 2004 FXSTB Softail Night Train motorcycle will be permanently housed in the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee, Wis., as a memorial to the victims of the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, which swamped several coastal towns in northeastern Japan and left more than 15,000 people dead.


    “It is truly amazing that my Harley-Davidson motorcycle was recovered in Canada after drifting for more than a year,” said the bike’s owner, Ikuo Yokoyama, in a press release issued Friday by Deeley Harley-Davidson, the Canadian distributor of Harleys. “I would like to take this opportunity to express my heartfelt appreciation to Peter Mark, the finder of my motorcycle. Due to circumstances caused by the disaster, I have been so far unable to visit him in Canada to convey my gratitude.”

    Mark found the motorcycle, still bearing its Japanese license plate, while driving his ATV on an isolated beach on Graham Island on the west coast of British Columbia on April 18. The bike, along with several other items, was inside a rusted cargo van container that apparently drifted more than 4,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean.

    “You just never know what you’re going to stumble upon when you go for a drive, and lo and behold you just come across something that’s out of this world,” Mark told CBC at the time.

    The motorcycle was eventually traced to the 29-year-old Yokoyama.

    The tsunami destroyed Yokoyama’s home in Miyagi prefecture and also claimed the lives of three family members, according to Japanese media reports. Yokoyama currently lives in temporary housing in Miyagi prefecture.

    He said the motorcycle was being kept in a storage container behind his house when the tsunami struck.

    Deeley Harley-Davidson Canada

    The Harley will soon be transported to the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee.

    Harley-Davidson offered to return the rust-encrusted bike to him and to restore it to running condition but Yokoyama respectfully declined, the company said.

    “Since the motorcycle was recovered, I have discussed with many people about what to do with it. I would be delighted if it could be preserved in its current condition and exhibited to the many visitors to the Harley Davidson Museum as a memorial to a tragedy that claimed thousands of lives,” Yokoyama was quoted as saying in Friday’s press release.

    Harley-Davidson has offered to fly him to visit the museum and meet Marks, the Canadian who retrieved the bike. Yokoyama said he would like to do so “when things have calmed down.”

    “My heart really goes out to Ikuo Yokoyama and all the survivors of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami for everything that was taken from them. I cannot even begin to comprehend the loss of family, friends, and community,” Mark was quoted by Harley-Davidson as saying. “I think it is fitting that the Harley, which was swept across the Pacific Ocean by the tsunami, will end up in the Harley-Davidson Museum as a memorial to that tragic event. It has an interesting and powerful story to convey preserved in its current state.”

    The motorcycle has since been transferred to a Harley dealership in Vancouver. Plans for its transportation to the Harley museum are being developed.

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    324 comments

    The grace, dignity, and kindness of Ikuo Yokoyama warms me. To suffer such losses is unimaginable to most of us. Wishing him future happiness and goodwill in his life.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, japan, tsunami, harley-davidson, motorcycle
  • 25
    May
    2012
    3:53am, EDT

    Crews prepare to remove 40 tons of Japan tsunami debris from Alaska island

    Buoys, bottles and cans believed to be from the Japan tsunami are surfacing in Washington State, Alaska and British Columbia, and scientists say the mess will be there for generations. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    By msnbc.com news services

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Cleanup workers will on Friday attack a jumble of debris from Japan's 2011 tsunami that litters an Alaskan island, as residents in the state gear up to scour their shores for everything from buoys to building material that has floated across the Pacific.

    The cleansing project slated to start on Montague Island is expected to last a couple weeks, and organizers say it marks the first major project in Alaska to collect and dispose of debris from the tsunami.


    The March 2011 tsunami, caused by a magnitude 9.0 earthquake, killed nearly 16,000 people and left over 3,000 missing on Japan's main island of Honshu, and precipitated a major radiation release at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

    Slideshow: Then-and-now: Tsunami cleanup

    AP

    View side-by-side the progress that Japan has made since the tsunami and earthquake in March 2011.

    Launch slideshow

    A U.S. senator has sought to obtain $45 million to tackle the problem, and officials have cited fears about invasive species and toxic substances thought to be among the floating mess of objects.

    Harley-Davidson washes up on Canadian coast

    While debris from Japan is also floating toward other U.S. states along the West Coast, Alaska has a more extensive shoreline, much of it difficult to reach.

    'Just a start'
    Montague is an uninhabited island at the entrance to Prince William Sound, southeast of Anchorage. About a dozen volunteers and employees from the environmental group Gulf of Alaska Keeper and the Center for Alaskan Coastal Studies will handle the debris-removal project at the island.

    "We'll probably remove 30 to 40 tons from there. That's just a start," said Patrick Chandler, special programs coordinator for the Center for Alaskan Coastal Studies.

    Japan has estimated 5 million tons of debris was swept out to sea, but that most of it sank, leaving 1.5 million tons floating. Still, those figures are rough estimates, said the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    Several citizens on Alaska's coastline are surprised by the tsunami debris that has been washing up on the beaches. KTUU's Ted Land reports on objects now found on Kayak Island from buoys and nets to food containers with Japanese writing.

    Observers flying over the Alaska coast have spotted, among other items, huge numbers of barrel-sized polystyrene foam buoys, often associated with Japanese oyster farms.

    Tiny specks of polystyrene foam that break away from larger objects can be dangerous to seabirds or marine mammals, because they resemble eggs or other food morsels, Chandler said.

    Japanese teen traced as owner of soccer ball found in Alaska

    Another worry is that floating debris might carry invasive species, such as barnacles, that would wreak havoc in waters off Alaska and the U.S. West Coast, said Doug Helton, the Seattle-based coordinator of NOAA's office of response and restoration.

    Then there is the danger from noxious substances in partly full fuel jugs, cleanup organizers said.

    Last month, the U.S. Coast Guard sank a 164-foot fishing boat from the Japan tsunami that drifted near Alaska. The Coast Guard said the so-called "ghost ship" was a navigational hazard.

    Tracking the debris from the Japan tsunami can be tricky, as it moves across the Pacific via ocean currents and winds. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    With more debris headed for the West Coast, questions about cleanup costs remain unanswered. Those expenses could be high in Alaska because of geographic and weather challenges.

    U.S. Senator Mark Begich of Alaska suggested last week that NOAA provide $45 million as an initial outlay to fund what is expected to be a sustained and difficult beach cleanup.

    Meanwhile, David Baxter, a technician who works at a Federal Aviation Administration station on the uninhabited Middleton Island in the Gulf of Alaska, has made some notable finds on his rounds in his hobby of beachcombing.

    Slideshow: Triple tragedy for Japan

    An earthquake, a tsunami, a nuclear meltdown -- residents of Japan's northeast coast suffered through three intertwined disasters after a massive 9.0 magnitude temblor struck off the coast on March 11, 2011.

    Launch slideshow

    Earlier this month, the owner of a tsunami-wrecked restaurant in the coastal Miyagi Prefecture spotted one of her buoys among Baxter's debris photos posted online. The yellow buoy was part of the restaurant's sign, he said.

    Baxter has arranged to send it back to the woman. "Now that her buoy's found, she's going to rebuild," he said.

    On Wednesday, the World Health Organization said increases in radiation linked to the Fukushima disaster were below cancer-causing levels in nearly all of Japan.

    The agency's 124-page report also says neighboring countries had levels similar to normal background radiation and for the rest of the world there was some minor exposure through food.

    The U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency had previously confirmed that radiation levels in some Japanese milk and vegetables reached significantly higher levels than Japan allows for consumption.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    137 comments

    Oh My Gawd... I sure hope the comments evolve soon. To see the effects globally of such a calamity as a 9. quake I would like to think there would be a tad more compassion in the response. But no, for now it's how are we gonna make any money or bill somebody for this trash. This was a global impact  …

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    Explore related topics: japan, alaska, tsunami, featured, fukushima, montague-island
  • 21
    Apr
    2012
    10:12pm, EDT

    New tsunami sign: Japanese soccer ball washes ashore on remote Alaska island

    David Baxter via NOAA

    This soccer ball with Japanese writing came from a school in a tsunami-stricken area of Japan.

    By msnbc.com staff

    A volleyball and soccer ball that washed ashore on an Alaskan island may be the first pieces of debris to arrive in the United States from last year's tsunami in Japan.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The sports balls were spotted by radar technician David Baxter on treeless, windswept Middleton Island in the Gulf of Alaska, Doug Helton of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle said in an agency blog post.

    Baxter’s wife translated writing on the soccer ball and traced it back to a Japanese school in an area hit by the tsunami, Helton said.


    He told the Anchorage Daily News the balls were the first tsunami debris retrieved in Alaska.

     

    "There have been other items that were suspected, but this is the first one that we're aware of that has the credentials that may make it possible to positively identify it."

    Helton, in the NOAA post, said the agency, the State Department and the Japanese Embassy and its Seattle consulate are working to confirm details and set up the return of other debris that comes ashore.

    A magnitude 9.0 earthquake off Japan's northeast coast on March 11, 2011, triggered a 75-foot wall of water that flattened waterfront towns, killing 16,000. Three thousand people are still unaccounted for. The tsunami triggered a crisis at Tokyo Electric Power's Fukushima Daiichi atomic power plant, forcing tens of thousands of people to flee in the world's worst nuclear accident in 25 years.

    U.S. authorities were immediately aware that the clockwise circulation of the Pacific's northern waters would deliver some remnants of that destruction to American shores.

    A Japanese ghost ship Ryou-Un Maru turned up earlier in the Gulf of Alaska off Southeast Alaska after a 4,500-mile journey. The U.S. Coast Guard ended sank the vessel April 5.

    In January, a half-dozen large buoys suspected to be from Japanese oyster farms appeared at the top of Alaska's panhandle and may be among the first tsunami debris.

    State health and environmental officials have said there's little need to be worried that debris landing on Alaska shores will be contaminated by radiation.

    This article contains reporting by Reuters and The Associated Press.

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    51 comments

    "A Japanese ghost ship Ryou-Un Maru turned up earlier in the Gulf of Alaska off Southeast Alaska after a 4,500-mile journey. The U.S. Coast Guard ended sank the vessel April 5." What does it mean when the U.S. Coast Guard "ended sank the vessel?"  Perhaps the MSNBC copy editor department&n …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, alaska, earthquake, tsunami, debris
  • 5
    Apr
    2012
    10:54am, EDT

    'Ghost ship' sinks to bottom of Gulf of Alaska after Coast Guard fires at it

    RAW VIDEO: In this U.S. Coast Guard video, a USCG boat fires on a Japanese ship adrift off the coast of Alaska in an attempt to sink the unmanned vessel and clear it from shipping lanes.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Updated at 10:30 a.m. ET: A fishing vessel set adrift by the tsunami in Japan has sunk in the Gulf of Alaska after a cutter fired at it, The Coast Guard said.

    Petty Officer David Moseley told msnbc.com that the vessel caught fire and took on water after the Coast Guard Cutter Anacapa fired its 25mm cannon at the derelict ship on Thursday, aiming to sink what it called a threat to shipping.

    The ship sank to the bottom of the ocean after it was pummeled at by high-explosive ammunition, the Vancouver Sun reported Friday morning. Explosives were fired at the stricken vessel in a "slow and deliberate" manner to ensure accuracy, Veronica Colbath, Coast Guard public affairs officer, said, The Sun reported.

    It took about four hours for the ship to vanish into the water, said Chief Petty Officer Kip Wadlow in Juneau. It sank into waters more than 6,000 feet deep, about 180 miles west of the southeast Alaska coast, the Coast Guard said.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Citing a Coast Guard spokesman, the Associated Press reported the firing began after a brief delay caused by a Canadian ship that wanted to salvage the Ryou-un Maru -- but then quickly found it it wasn't able to tow it back to shore.

    Besides clearing a shipping lane, sinking the nearly 200-foot-long vessel provides the Anacapa crew "a great way for them to put their skills to use," Coast Guard spokesman Kip Wadlow told msnbc.com from Juneau, Alaska.


    Wadlow said the drifting vessel makes shipping in the area extremely dangerous. "There's no crew on board, it doesn't have any light ...  and it's in a high volume shipping lane," he noted.

    The Coast Guard fired cannons on the ship that had drifted to the Gulf of Alaska after becoming unmoored after the Japan tsunami, choosing to sink the vessel rather than having it pose a risk to maritime traffic. NBC's Savannah Guthrie reports.

    The fishing boat, which was in port waiting to be scrapped when the tsunami took it out to sea, is far enough away that any fuel on board would not make it to shore, Wadlow added. The Coast Guard later elaborated that it appeared to be carrying little fuel since it was riding high in the water, the AP reported.

    A Coast Guard C-130 was flying over the area to warn away any nearby ships for what is described as a "live fire exercise."

    More photos of the Ryou-un Maru sinking

    Dropping crews aboard the boat is too dangerous, Wadlow said, and "the owner no longer wants it."

    But that didn't stop the Bernice C from trying to make some money off the rusty vessel.

    Based in Petersburg, Alaska, the Anacapa arrived Wednesday night alongside the Ryou-un Maru, which entered U.S. waters on April 1. The ship was moored at a harbor in Hachinohe, Japan, when the earthquake and tsunami hit on March 11, 2011.

    The vessel is the first large object to reach North America following the tsunami. Smaller objects have been found on U.S. coasts but much more debris is expected to make its way via currents to U.S. and Canadian beaches by 2014.

    State officials have been working with federal counterparts to gauge the danger of debris including material affected by a damaged nuclear power plant, to see if Alaska residents, seafood or wild game could be affected.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    765 comments

    KatGirl, you're absolutely right. My thoughts, exactly. Just what is so dangerous about putting a salvage crew on that ship, tow it to a dock, drain the fuel out, THEN sink the thing as a habitat reef? I don't get it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: tsunami, coast-guard, featured, ghost-ship
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