
of KUMAMOTO
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Colorful Nature
Kumamoto is located in the center of the Kyushu island.
It is ninety-five minutes away from Tokyo by airplane
(1,072km), but is only eighty-five minutes from Seoul
in Korea (631km). As the fifteenth largest prefecture
in Japan, it covers approximately 7,402 square kilometers.
The land mass is seven times that of Hong Kong and about
half of Northern Ireland. Seventy percent of the land
is forested. Gently rolling hills can be found in the
north, while to the east and the south are mountainous
areas that reach heights of 1,000 meters. Deep valleys
are found in every area that afford views of breathtaking
beauty. To the west is the Ariake and the Yatsushiro seas
linked to the open sea, the East China Sea. Kumamoto has
two national parks, one is the Aso Kuju National Park
that includes the magnificent Aso volcano which boasts
the best caldera in the world, and Unzen Amakusa National
Park, the other, that comprise 120 islands, both large
and small. In the geographical sense, Kumamoto has an
abundance of beautiful landscapes.
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Marked Temperature Differences
The weather of Kumamoto is generally mild, and the Amakusa
coastal area is the northernmost limit of a coral reef.
The area around Kumamoto City has an inland climate, and
is characterized by large fluctuations in temperature.
In summer, it is not unusual to have a temperature above
35-C, and it stays hot through the midnight. On the other
hand, in the middle of the winter, the temperature can
fall below freezing. Local torrential downpours sometimes
towards the end of the rainy season, owing to the terrestrial
influences of hot and humid air currents from the southwest.
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Aging of the Population
The population of Kumamoto, as of 1995, stood at approximately
1,860 thousand. This is an increase since 1972, but fifteen
percent of the population is over sixty-five years old.
This phenomenon of aging has begun ten years ahead of
the rest of the country.
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