LIVING IN JAPAN

Living in the Shade of Sakurajima—The Most Active Volcano in Japan

Where ash-fall is an everyday occurrence

Diane Neill Tincher
7 min readJun 20, 2021

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Have you ever wondered what it would be like to live next to — or on — an active volcano? Well, that is what we who live in Kagoshima, Japan, experience every day.

Sakurajima is an active stratovolcano just four kilometers across Kagoshima Bay from downtown Kagoshima City, in southern Japan. Although its name means “cherry blossom island,” it is no longer an island as a result of a major eruption in 1914.

Sakurajima is situated across Kagoshima Bay from Kagoshima City.

Sakurajima is one of the most active volcanoes in the world, averaging over 1,000 eruptions per year from 2009 to 2015. In 2020, it calmed down to a reasonable—for local residents—432 eruptions.

Color photo taken on Sakurajima in 2012. The trees are heavy with ash.

In spite of the frequent eruptions, people have lived on the volcano since ancient times. Shell heaps, made of shells discarded after their contents were eaten, dating from the Jomon Era (14,000–600BC in southern Kyushu) have been uncovered by archaeologists.

Although more than 20,000 lived on the island prior to 1914, today, the population has shrunk to…

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Diane Neill Tincher
Diane Neill Tincher

Written by Diane Neill Tincher

Top writer in Travel. I’ve lived in Japan since 1987 & love learning, history, & the beauty of nature. Pls use my link to join Medium: https://bit.ly/3yqwppZ

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