Sea of Japan

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The Sea of Japan is a marginal sea of the western Pacific Ocean, bound by the Japanese islands of Hokkaido, Honshu and Kyushu and Sakhalin island to the east, and the Korean peninsula and Russia to the west.

The sea is connected to other seas by six shallow straits: the Strait of Tartary or Mamiya Strait between the Asian mainland and Sakhalin; La Perouse Strait or Soya Strait between the islands of Sakhalin and Hokkaido; the Tsugaru Strait between the islands of Hokkaido and Honshu; the Kanmon Strait between the islands of Honshu and Kyushu; the Tsushima Strait between the islands of Kyushu and Tsushima; and the Korea Strait between Tsushima and the Korean peninsula.

The deepest point is 3742 meters below sea level, its mean depth is 1752 metres. The surface area of the sea os about 978,000 km�. The sea has three major basins. The Yamato Basin lies in the south east of the Sea of Japan; the Japan Basin in the north; the Tsushima Basin in the south west. The Japan basin is the deepest area of the Sea, and the shallowest water can be found in the Tsushima Basin.

On the eastern shores, the continental shelves of the Sea are wide, but on the western shores, particularly along the Korean coast, they are narrow, averaging at about 30 kilometres. The warm water in the Sea contributes to the mild climate in Japan.

The areas in the north and the south east are rich fishing grounds. The imprtance of the fishery in the Sea is well illustrated by the mutual claims on the Liancourt_Rocks by Japan and South Korea. The Sea is also important for its mineral deposits, particularly magnetite sands. There are also natural gas and a few petrolium fields. Since the growing of the Eas Asian economies, the Sea of Japan is an important commercial waterway.


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