Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Mizunokojima Lighthouse

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Location
  
Bungo Channel Japan

Focal height
  
56.3 metres (185 ft)

Height
  
39 m

Automated
  
1986

Construction
  
stone tower

Light source
  
solar power

Opened
  
1904

Year first constructed
  
1904

Mizunokojima Lighthouse

Tower shape
  
cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern

Markings / pattern
  
white and black bands tower, white lantern

Address
  
Saiki, Oita Prefecture, Japan

Similar
  
Mikomotoshima Lighthouse, Kinkasan Lighthouse, Hesaki Lighthouse, Sugashima Lighthouse, Shirasu Lighthouse

Mizunokojima Lighthouse (水ノ子島灯台, Mizunokojima Tōdai) is an active lighthouse located in Japan's Bungo Channel.

Contents

Specifications

The structure is located on Mizunokojima, a small rocky island roughly 25 kilometres (16 mi) east-northeast from the city of Saiki, in the middle of the Bungo Channel. The light itself is 56 metres (184 ft) above sea level, while the building is 36 metres (118 ft) off the ground; the height of the island makes up the difference. It is one of Japan's tallest lighthouses. The tower is painted in alternating black and white horizontal stripes. The light flashes once every ten seconds and emits 1,200,000 candela. The white two-story keeper's house is located directly next to the light.

History

The Mizunokojima Lighthouse began operating on 20 March 1904, after a torturous four-year construction marked by difficulties brought on by the remoteness of the location. The location had to be abandoned on 4 May 1945 during World War II due to Allied strafing and bombs, but service was restored with acetylene gas lamps by 17 May 1946. On 15 November 1950, the normal light was finally repaired. The lighthouse was manned until 1986, when it transitioned to automatic control. Solar and wave power generators were installed in 2002.

Several typhoons have hit the lighthouse in its years of operation, and the resulting high waves have caused damage. Keepers' records show that waves taller than the roof of the lighthouse hit on 22 September 1922. Another typhoon on 1 October 1941 created waves that reached up to the seventh floor of the lighthouse, rendering equipment like meteorological instruments, radio equipment, generators, and batteries unusable, and the storm destroyed the adjoining pier.

References

Mizunokojima Lighthouse Wikipedia


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