Town/City: 

Tokyo

State/Province: 

Tokyo

Country: 

Japan

Latitude/Longitude: 

35N 140E

Information supplied by

Penny Morrill


7 Borden St, Toronto, Ontario

 

Dated Fri Dec 4 02:45:40 1998 


Information Topics:


City Description:

Tokyo is the national capital of Japan. The city encompasses 2,820 sq km and is about the same size as Los Angeles, with nearly three times the population. The actual population of the Metropolitan Tokyo area is 28, 447, 000 people. The national currency is the yen. The practiced religion is Buddhism and Shintoism. Japan is nine hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time. Health standards in Tokyo are equal to or surpass those found in other highly industrialized countries. The water is safe to drink, and the food is safe to eat. (www.city.net/countries/japan/tokyo/?page=factsheet)

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Climate:

According to the Koppen-Geiger system, Tokyo lies in within the Mesothermal Climate (Cfa) classification. This humid subtropical hot summer climate's warmest month is above 22 C (71.6 F). The Cf indicates that Tokyo is moist all year around with the f indicating that all months receive precipitation above 3 cm (1.2 in). This climate system is influenced during the summer by the maritime tropical air masses that are generated over warm coastal waters off the eastern coast. In the fall, winter and spring maritime tropical and continental polar air masses interact, generating frontal activity and frequent midlatitude cyclonic storms. Overall the precipitation averages 100-200 cm (40 - 80 in) per year. Tokyo's summer precipitation is quite a bit higher than its winter precipitation because of the effects of the Asian monsoon. (Christopherson, 1992)

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Basic Hydrogeology:

Tokyo lies in the western part of the Kanto Plain, otherwise known as the Kanto Tectonic Basin. The Kanto Mountains lie in the most western part of Tokyo. The Musashino Terrace found in the centre of Tokyo, was developed in the northern part of the Tama River. Shitamachi Lowland lies in the east at zero elevation. The quaternary sediments underlying Musashino Terrace and Shitamachi Lowlands are divided into stratigraphically into two groups; the lower is the Kazusa Group and the upper the Tokyo Group. The Kazusa Group consists of the Kitatama and Higashikurume Formations (FMs) and in ascending order, the Tokyo Group consists of the Toneri, Edogawa, and Takasago FMs. These deposits consist of unconsolidated layers of silt, sand, and gravel, which act as confined aquifers throughout the terrace and the lowland. The Kanto Loam FM, Terrace Sand and Gravel FM lie above these quaternary sediments on the terrace and provide the unconfined groundwater systems to the Tokyo metropolis. The lowland is capped with the youngest sediments in this region, the Nanagochi and Yurakucho FMs. The Kitatama FM of the Kazusa Group contains the oldest sediments discussed here. Found both within the terrace and the lowland, this formation mainly consists of impermeable massive silty layers. Formations overlying the Kitatama FM contain permeable sand and gravel. Next in the younging succession is the Higashikurume FM, which consists of intercalated silty beds. In the lower most parts of this formation are the Johoku Sand and Gravel Bed stratigraphic units. This formation acts as a confined aquifer all over the Musashino Terrace. The Toneri, Edogawa and Takasago FMs of the Tokyo group consists of alternating layers of silt, sand, and gravel, which are sufficient groundwater reservoirs. The Toneri FM forms the base of the Tokyo Group and provides water to wells in the terrace and the lowland except in the western and southern parts, where erosion has occurred. The top layer of the Musashino Terrace is covered by Kanto loam, which consists of volcanic ejecta originating from the volcanoes of Fuji and Hakone. A bed of clay separates the loam from the gravel terrace beneath. Infiltration of the groundwater is restricted by this bed, thus causing the groundwater to be retained in the Kanto Loam. West of the terrace, a series of continuous groundwater tables reflect a fan-type landform, with close similarity to the surface contours of the area. In the middle of the terrace the groundwater table shows a trend of transition from high in the west to low in the east with multiple perched water tables and groundwater mounds. In the east, groundwater is found at closer to the surface, at shallower depths. The Shitamachi Lowland is not covered by the Kanto Loam and its surface expression is represented by sediments that consist of sandy clay. Shallow unconfined water levels are found within the sandy clays.

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Water Use:

Confined groundwater systems are being developed in the Tama District, the western part of the terrace, and are mainly recharged with river water form the Tama River. The unconfined groundwater system is being developed in the surface layers such as the terrace sand and gravel formations and Kanto Loam FM. Both the unconfined and confined water is used for household water supplies, industrial and air- conditioning use for nearly seven decades.

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Groundwater Issues:

Road paving and vegetation removal accompany urbanization. These and other alterations to the landscape have caused a major change in the amount of recharge to the unconfined aquifer. Capping a surface results in reduction of water seepage into the soil causing an increase in runoff and erosion rates. Sewage ducts reroute the sewage water collected and drain it into outlying areas. This results in drastic flow reduction in the river within a drainage area. This may also result in drying up of the affected area of the river. There was once a well-known spring that formed such ponds as Inogashira Zenpukuji, and Sanpoji, but they are now drying due to a continually diminishing flow of the springs in the area. Organic chlorine compounds such as trichloroethylene, tetrachloroethylene, and trichloroethane were detected in 74 of 302 wells; most of these were drilled into confined aquifers. In 21 of 74 wells, the trichloroethylene levels exceeded the accepted standard for service water. It was suggested that these compounds were orginially derived from the waste matter dumped by metal product manufactures and laundries. This is a critical issue for people living in the Tama District where a great deal of groundwater is pumped for household use.

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Groundwater Problems:

The seasonal drop in the confined water table is and has been a result of heavy pumping for house hold water supplies and air-conditioning use during the summer months. These temporal variations in confined groundwater levels in Tokyo have indicated two different regional patterns which occur separately in the Wards District and the Tama District. The groundwater pumped in the Wards District is very small compared to the extensive pumping in the Tama District. Land subsidence has occurred in both districts. The Koto Region in the Wards District has suffered from land subsidence due to confined groundwater withdrawal for several decades and has experienced many sever disasters from high tides and flooding. Parts of the Koto Region subsided 4.5 m from 1918 to 1987.In the Tama District subsidence has extended all the way up to the northeastern part of this region in the cities of Kiyose, Hoya, and Higashikurume. Positions of well screens in confined aquifers as legally required were at inadequate depths before 1975. In the Tama District wells for household water supply that were constructed before 1975 are allowed to continue to be used. In this district the groundwater has been mostly withdrawn for household water supplies. As the population increases more groundwater is pumped to supply household, industrial, and air-conditioning use. Land subsidence in the lowland has been brought about by the compaction of not only the Alluvial soft clay sediments in the Yurakucho FM, but also the quaternary Tokyo and Kazusa Groups. The amount of compaction of the Yurakucho FM comprised almost half of the total vertical land subsidence. The occurrence of land subsidence is a serious problem for flood control over the lowland. Almost all the lowland is below sea level, and now has to be protected by extensive dikes and drainage systems that prevent disasters relating to hightide and flooding.

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Solutions:

In 1963 two laws were passed, the first was The Industrial Water Law and the second was the Law Controlling Pumping of Groundwater for Use of Buildings. As a result there was a halt in the confined aquifer decline due to the national governments restrictions on groundwater withdrawal for industrial purposes and for air-conditioning use in buildings. In 1975 the existing rates of confined groundwater withdrawal were strictly revised in Koto and surrounding regions. Well screens were deepened and the horizontal pipe section of the pump machine was reduced. Since 1971 both public and private facilities that were using wells for municipal offices, factories and buildings have had to measure and report their monthly rates of groundwater withdrawals to the Tokyo Metropolitan Government under the Tokyo Metropolitan Environmental Pollution Control Ordinance. As a result of these increased restriction, the quantity of confined groundwater withdrawal was decreased and the water levels all over the Wards District have been raised since then.

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References and Other Author(s):

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Contacts:

www.city.net/countries/japan/tokyo/?page=factsheet

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