Globe > Asia > Japan > Miyake-jima > Gas Mask Tourism on the Izu Islands
Gas Mask Tourism on the Izu Islands
Sulphuric gases on a beautiful Japanese island
Category Natural Wonders, Anomalous Islands, Intriguing Environs, Disaster Areas
The brave souls inhabiting Miyakejima, one of Japan's Izu Islands, an archipelago just south of Tokyo, have a unique problem. Here, the land rests atop an active volcanic chain that has erupted six times in the last century. However, the danger isn't just from volcanic eruptions, but from the highest concentrations of poisonous gasses (primarily sulfur) in the world regularly leaking up through the ground.
In 2000, a mass evacuation was instituted due to extremely high levels of toxic gas in the area after a series of eruptions from Mount Oyama, the main volcano on the island. All flights into the area were stopped for over eight years due to the high levels of sulphur as well. Miyakejima residents were finally permitted to return to their “normal” routines in 2005 though residents are required to carry a gas mask with them at all times.
Hypothetically speaking, were one to visit the Izu Islands, they might wake to a siren in the middle of the night, only to be met in the dark by a confused, wandering child wearing a gas mask, a hand extended asking "Are you my mother?"
Although Miyakejima appears frightening and almost post-apocalyptic, tourists can, in fact, visit the island. Aside from the dangers of poisonous gas, parts of the island are extremely lush and apparently the scuba diving is a beautiful experience filled with dolphin sightings. For visitors who believe the benefits outweigh the danger, gas masks are available upon arrival at many tourist shops on the island.
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- Address Miyakejima, Japan
- Volcano Live: Miyakejima Volcano - John Seach: http://www.volcanolive.com/miyakejima.html
- The Japan Times Online: "Miyakejima Calling" (February 2005): http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ed20050203a1.html
- Wild Bird Society of Japan: Bird Sanctuary: http://www.wbsj.org/en/miyake/
Visitors can reach Miyakejima by boat or helicopter flight from Tokyo.
Comments
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Anonymous
April 19, 2012
Anonymous: can't speak on the second picture, but the first picture looks old-timey because it <em>is</em> old-timey. It's called "Pioneers in Defense Drill, Leningrad" and was taken in 1937 by Soviet photographer Viktor Bulla. As such, it has absolutely nothing to do with this article. (And makes me skeptical of the second photo's relevance, as it likewise is just an imaged swiped from someone's blog with no information provided.) -
Anonymous
March 1, 2012
Why are the photographs made to look "old-timey" when they must have been taken after 2005? I did get the Dr. Who reference. :-) -
Not sure if I'm the only one who gets it, but the Doctor Who reference is brilliant, just brilliant!
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Anonymous
June 8, 2011
Difficult life on those places. Leaving the place you live in is very difficult.

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