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for all refs see: Former Yanagawa Kameoka Hachiman-gū and Temple Grounds 旧梁川亀岡八幡宮並びに別当寺境域 kyū-Yanagawa Kameoka Hachimangū narabini bettōji kyōiki: Date: also a Prefectural Historic Site
This category contains landmarks, locations, events, sports teams, and anything else which might attract visitors (whether tourist or otherwise) to Fukushima Prefecture, Japan Wikimedia Commons has media related to Visitor attractions in Fukushima prefecture .
Site Municipality Comments Image Coordinates Type Ref. Yuno-Nishihara temple ruins 湯野西原廃寺跡 Yuno-Nishihara Haiji ato: Fukushima: for all refs see: Iinohakusan Residence ruins
Futaba was severely affected by the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, and the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011. Besides sustaining considerable damage from the earthquake and the tsunami (which devastated the coastal area), the entire population of the town was evacuated en masse on the morning of March 12, as it is well within the 20 km (12 mi) exclusion radius around ...
Lake Inawashiro (猪苗代湖, Inawashiro-ko) is the fourth-largest lake in Japan, [1] located in central Fukushima Prefecture, south of Mount Bandai.It is also known as the 'Heavenly Mirror Lake' (天鏡湖, Tenkyōko).
The Shirakawa Barrier (白河の関, Shirakawa no seki) is the location of a frontier fortification on the Ōshū Kaidō highway in what is now the Hatajuku neighborhood of the city of Shirakawa, Fukushima Japan, three kilometers south of the border of Tochigi Prefecture [1] The site was designated a National Historic Site in 1966., [2] and is part of the Shirakawa Seki-no-mori Park ...
3.11: Surviving Japan was conceived, directed, filmed and narrated by Christopher Noland. The executive producer was Simon Hilton; producers were Q'orianka Kilcher, Dave Parrish and Noland; the cinematographer was Noland; editing was done by Noland, MB X. McClain and Andrea Hale; the sound editor and mixer was Scott Delaney; "Kurushi" by Yoko Ono contributed to the soundtrack.
Fukushima Tunnel (福島トンネル, Fukushima tonneru) is a tunnel on Tōhoku Shinkansen that runs from Adachi Station in Nihonmatsu city to Minami-Fukushima Station in Fukushima city, Fukushima prefecture with total length of 11.705 m. It was built and completed in 1982.