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Honshu contains Japan's highest mountain, Mount Fuji, and its largest lake, Lake Biwa. [13] Most of Japan's industry is located in a belt running along Honshu's southern coast, from Tokyo to Nagoya, Kyōto, Osaka, Kobe, and Hiroshima; [12] by contrast, the economy along the northwestern Sea of Japan coast is largely based on fishing and ...
The Kanmon Straits (関門海峡, Kanmon-kaikyō) or the Straits of Shimonoseki is the stretch of water separating Honshu and Kyushu, two of Japan's four main islands.On the Honshu side of the strait is Shimonoseki (下関, which contributed "Kan" (関) to the name of the strait) and on the Kyushu side is Kitakyushu, whose former city and present ward, Moji (門司), gave the strait its "mon ...
Port of Yokosuka This page was last edited on 6 February 2017, at 04:01 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
Honshu – the largest and most populous island, with the capital Tokyo. Honshu is connected to the other three main islands by bridges and tunnels. Kyushu – the third largest main island, second most populous and the nearest to the Asian continent. Shikoku – the smallest and least populous main island, located between Honshu and Kyushu.
Port Madison and mainland Kitsap County in Puget Sound: Agattu Strait: Attu Island and Agattu Island in the Alaskan Aleutians: Akashi Strait: Honshu and Awaji: Alas Strait: Lombok and Sumbawa: Alor Strait: Lesser Sunda Islands: Amchitka Pass: the Rat Islands group to the west and the Delarof Islands to the east within the Alaskan Aleutians ...
Sagami Bay (相模湾, Sagami-wan, also known as the Sagami Gulf or Sagami Sea) lies south of Kanagawa Prefecture in Honshu, central Japan, contained within the scope of the Miura Peninsula, in Kanagawa, to the east, the Izu Peninsula, in Shizuoka Prefecture, to the west, and the Shōnan coastline to the north, while the island of Izu Ōshima marks the southern extent of the bay.
The Port of Akita (秋田港, Akita-kō), formerly known as Port of Tsuchizaki, is a seaport on the Sea of Japan coast of Akita Prefecture, to the west of the city center of Akita in the Tōhoku region of northern Honshū, Japan. It is classified as a Major Port (重要港湾, Jūyō-kōwan) by the Japanese government.
A monument indicates the northernmost point of Japan at Cape Sōya on Hokkaido. Cape Irizaki, Japan's westernmost point on Yonaguni Island Japan's easternmost point lies on Minami Torishima in the Pacific Ocean.