- Northeastern Japan Arc
Northeastern Japan Arc also Northeastern Honshū Arc, is an
island arc on thePacific Ring of Fire . The arc runs north to south along theTohoku region ofHonshū ,Japan . It is the result of thesubduction of thePacific Plate underneath theNorth American Plate at theJapan Trench . The southern end of the arc converges with theSouthwestern Japan Arc and theIzu-Bonin-Mariana Arc at theFossa Magna at the east end of theItoigawa-Shizuoka Tectonic Line (ITIL). This is the geologic border between eastern and western Honshū.Mount Fuji is at the point where these three arcs meet. To the north, the Northeastern Japan arc extends through theOshima Peninsula ofHokkaidō . The arc converges in a collision zone with theSakhalin island arc and theKuril arc in the volcanicIshikari Mountains of central Hokkaidō. This collision formed the Teshio andYubari Mountains .The
Ōu Mountains form the volcanic part of theinner arc . Thevolcanic front consists ofQuarternary volcanoes, which extend the length of the range. It also includes the Quarternary volcanoes of southwestern Hokkaidō. TheDewa Mountains and theIide Mountains are non-volcanic uplift ranges that run parallel to the west of the Ōu Mountains.The outer arc ranges are the Kitakami and the
Abukuma Mountains . These mountains are made from pre-tertiary rock. The mountains rose in theCenozoic and have since been worn smooth by erosion.References
* [http://glgarcs.lad.jp/index.html GLGArcs] , An Introduction to the Landforms and Geology of Japan, 2006, last access 2008-09-11.
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