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  • 18/07/2025
On July 17, 2025, Japan was shaken by a swarm of 19 earthquakes in less than 17 hours. While most of the tremors were mild, one reached a seismic intensity of 3 — enough to rattle nerves and furniture. The quakes hit near the Tokara Islands, Miyakojima, and even offshore areas close to the Aleutian Islands. No tsunami warnings or major damage have been reported so far, but the Japanese authorities have issued a red weather alert, urging caution as seismic activity continues. Could this be a warning sign of something bigger ahead? Watch the full breakdown.
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Transcript
00:00Japan just got shaken by not one, not two, but 19 earthquakes in a single day.
00:05From midnight to late afternoon on July 17, tremors rippled across the country.
00:10Most of them were mild, but one quake reached a seismic intensity of three, enough to be felt indoors.
00:17The epicenters? Scattered across Japan's southern coasts, near the Takara Islands, Miyakojima, and even close to the Aleutian Islands.
00:26Imagine waking up to your walls rattling again and again.
00:29In some places, quakes struck just minutes apart, the strongest hit around 10 a.m. near the Takara Islands.
00:36But thankfully, no damage, no tsunami, and no one hurt.
00:40Still, with 19 quakes in under 17 hours, people are on edge.
00:44So much so that Japan issued a red weather alert. A rare move signaling conditions could shift quickly.
00:51Could this be a warning sign of more intense seismic activity to come?
00:55Experts are watching closely. Because in a country built on fault lines, even small tremors can mean big things ahead.
01:03Doing something?
01:05That's all right.
01:08Last time, we get a cover.
01:10Avada.
01:12

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