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    The Archaeology of a Disaster the Aftermath of Japans 2011 Earthquake and TsunamiDean Chapman

    On Friday 11th March 2011, as the end of the working week moved to its close, most people in Japan would

    have been looking forward to a late winters weekend; many students would have been celebrating the

    approaching end to the academic year. Then, at 2:46 in the afternoon, a colossal earthquake struck deep

    beneath the Pacic Ocean some 45 miles off of Japans northeast coast. Tsunami sirens wailed along thelength of Japans eastern seaboard and local announcements repeatedly implored people to ee to higher

    ground: it wasnt an exercise and a major tsunami was heading their way. It is reckoned the rst tsunami

    made land some 26 minutes later. Within the following hour thousands had drowned, towns and cities had

    been decimated, and a major nuclear incident was unfolding.

    I was preparing breakfast for my wife and children when the rst reports of an earthquake in Japan broke on

    the radio particularly worrying news, as my wife is Japanese. We switched on the TV but the now famous

    footage had yet to reach the international news channels. Sketchy radio dispatches spoke of tsunamis

    inundating hundreds of miles of Japans northern Pacic coast. It took hours for my wife to contact her family,

    who live north of Tokyo, to make sure everyone was safe.

    Three months after the catastrophe, I hitchhiked down the northeastern coast of Honshu, Japans main island,

    retracing a journey Id made in the summer of 2000. Where there had once been vibrant shing communities

    and the popular tourist destinations of the striking Rikuchu Kaigan National Park, there was now utter

    devastation: towns and cities had been wiped from the surface earth, tsunami walls, bridges, roads and

    railways had disappeared. The jumbled scattering of broken materials and miscellaneous objects, everyday

    items and personal effects that littered the coastline were being systematically gathered for processing.

    Survivors sometimes spoke of their fortunate escape from the inundation, and of the loss of friends, homes

    and livelihoods.

    I made further journeys along the Sanriku Coast in October 2011 and September 2012. My approach documenting

    the consequences of the earthquake and tsunami was rstly determined, in a very straightforward manner,

    by having previous visited the northern mountainous coastline I re-photographed locations that I had visited

    before. However, through an evolving process of trying to interpret the human and geographical scale of the

    disaster in a more subtle and measured manner, I began to look for cultural and personal items or locations

    that would act as metaphors for the disaster and the recovery.

    The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant is located approximately 80 miles south of the area documentedin this exhibition.

    www.deanchapmanphotos.com

    TSUNAMI GALLERY