1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake
0 sources
1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake
Summary
1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake is a Tōkai earthquake[1]. It draws 35 Wikipedia views per month (t_kai_earthquake category, ranking #1 of 1).[2]
Key Facts
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake is located in Tōkaidō[3].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake is in the country of Japan[4].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's image is recorded as Kawaraban-of-1855-Ansei-Edo-earthquake.png[5].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's instance of is recorded as Tōkai earthquake[6].
- Ansei is named after 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake[7].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's followed by is recorded as 1854 Ansei-Nankai earthquake[8].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's locator map image is recorded as 1854 Ansei Tokai earthquake intensity.png[9].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's locator map image is recorded as Fault models of 1854 Ansei-Tokai-earthquake.png[10].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's part of is recorded as Q131821869[11].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's Commons category is recorded as 1854 Ansei Tōkai earthquake[12].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's point in time is recorded as +1854-12-23T00:00:00Z[13].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 34, 'lon': 137.8}[14].
- 1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09gdtgd[15].
Why It Matters
1854 Ansei-Tōkai earthquake draws 35 Wikipedia views per month (t_kai_earthquake category, ranking #1 of 1).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[16]