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Chiba City Earthquake and Storm & Flood Damage Hazard Map (WEB Version)|同意画面 Confirm As the data used in calculating which points are at risk has been simplified for publication there is a margin for error. As the data that predicts which points are at risk is based on a certain number of conditions, it is possible that actual disasters may exceed these predictions. Agree Disagree 『千葉市地震・風水害ハザードマップ(WEB版)』利用条件 <利用条件> ●本サイトのサポ
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/jf_hazardmap/agree_en.html 種別:html サイズ:15.682KB
locations for basic survey The region is the result of extracting hazardous areas using a numerical elevation model, and a detailed survey will be conducted in the future. Broad-Area Evacuation Site A reasonably open space where you can protect yourself from disasters affecting broad areas such as large earthquakes. Designated Emergency Evacuation Site A place or institution such as a park, a school gymnasium, or a schoolyard where you may temporarily secure your safety. Designated Emergency Evacuation Site and Designated Emergency Evacuation Shelter This is a facility that offers temporary logding in the case that one's loses
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/jf_hazardmap/map_en.html 種別:html サイズ:76.296KB
the Jomon period? Chibanosuke Guide Buried Dog from the Kasori Shell Mounds Looks like there were dogs even in the Jomon period! Did they go on walks or play with humans, like now? They might’ve played, aye, but they had real jobs to do as well. Jobs? Like what? The Jomon dogs were hunting partners. They were indispensable companions in hunting, driving prey into traps. The prey would have also become food for the dogs as a reward. Did they have other roles too? In cold seasons, humans and Jomon dogs huddled together to stay warm, and also
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/kyodo_navi/en/05_knowledge/02.html 種別:html サイズ:3.014KB
is the result of many generations of selective breeding. Wow, that’s quite a difference. Harvesting methods were also different. Today, rice is harvested from the base, but in the Yayoi period, stone reaper were used to pick only the ears of rice. Modern rice was developed as a result of various innovations!
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/kyodo_navi/en/05_knowledge/03.html 種別:html サイズ:3.811KB
Knowledge Spots|Chibanosuke Guide 5How Did Samurai Fight Back Then? Chibanosuke Guide How did samurai fight in those days? They mainly fought on horseback using bows and arrows. They’d ride toward the enemy, shoot an arrow as they passed by, and then ride off! Since the bow was held in the left hand, they guided their horse to keep the enemy on their left side for a better shot. Wouldn’t it be easier to just aim for the horse from the start? Eek?! Targeting the horse was, in truth, against the rules. So was aiming for the groom
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/kyodo_navi/en/05_knowledge/05.html 種別:html サイズ:2.602KB
During Masakado’s rebellion, the imperial court didn’t send out its own army—they had other warriors like Masakado fight against him, right? Indeed. Though they did fight under the court’s command... keeping a conscriptional army cost too much. Hiring warriors was small group but stronger,as a result cheaper. But they wouldn’t fight for free, would they? Nay. The court offered rewards in the form of ranks and titles. ’Twas common in those days to grant social status instead of land as a reward.
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/kyodo_navi/en/05_knowledge/06.html 種別:html サイズ:2.559KB
bow in the garden. Haven’t we seen a similar picture somewhere in the exhibit? Aye, a similar painting is up on the 4th floor. This here is Lord Masakado—he was Lord Yoshibumi’s nephew. He rose in rebellion against the imperial court in Kyoto and is remembered as a hero of the Bandō region.
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/kyodo_navi/en/05_knowledge/17.html 種別:html サイズ:2.214KB
An Illustration of Hirakawa Village (Close-up of Houses) It’s so colorful! What do the different colors mean? Each color shows land controlled by a different lord. Even the houses are colored differently. Aye, the houses were divided up by which lord they belonged to as well.
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/kyodo_navi/en/05_knowledge/26.html 種別:html サイズ:2.716KB
Village This is a wooden notice board that listed rules for the whole village to follow. It was usually put up in the village center. What kind of rules were written on it? During the Edo period, the shogunate had boards like this posted with orders such as: be filial to your parents, don’t leave the village without permission, and don’t practice Christianity. Did they take it down when the Meiji era started? Actually, they put up new boards in the name of the Meiji government—with almost the exact same rules! Huh?! If it was the
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/kyodo_navi/en/05_knowledge/30.html 種別:html サイズ:3.18KB
the “Fukutoku Enman Sugoroku” game was used in various regions! But the shops shown on it were different in each town? Aye, it seems a publisher in Tokyo sold blank sugoroku boards—with only the pictures—to local newspapers across the country. The newspapers then sold the spaces as ad slots to local shops, matched them to the illustrations, printed the boards, and delivered them with the New Year’s edition. Quite the clever business model, indeed!
https://www.city.chiba.jp/other/kyodo_navi/en/05_knowledge/37.html 種別:html サイズ:2.453KB