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  2. Usuki Stone Buddhas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usuki_Stone_Buddhas

    Constructing Buddha statues out of stone is widely practiced in Buddhist areas in Asia. These images can be divided into three broad types: Magaibutsu (磨崖仏, literally "polished-cliff Buddha"), bas-relief images carved directly into a cliff face, movable independent stone Buddhas carved from cut stone, and Buddhas carved inside rock caves, The Usuki images can be classed as Magaibutsu.

  3. Kyushu National Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyushu_National_Museum

    Unlike most museums in Japan, which contract out conservation work, the Kyushu National Museum has an extensive on-site suite of conservation labs and associated staff, serving as the major conservation center for all of western Japan. [3] The museum was designed by Kiyonori Kikutake. [4]

  4. Kyushu Historical Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyushu_Historical_Museum

    Kyushu Historical Museum. The Kyushu Historical Museum (九州歴史資料館, Kyushu-rekishi-shiryokan) is a history museum in Ogōri, Fukuoka, Japan. The museum first opened in Dazaifu in 1973, but moved to its present location in 2010. The site of the new museum is twice as large as the original location.

  5. Mount Kaimon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Kaimon

    Kaimondake (開聞岳, Kaimon-dake), or Mount Kaimon, is an undissected [i] volcano – consisting of a basal stratovolcano and a small complex central lava dome [2] – which rises to a height of 924 metres above sea level near the city of Ibusuki in southern Kyūshū, Japan. The last eruption occurred in the year 885 CE.

  6. List of World Heritage Sites in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_Heritage...

    This made Japan the first example of a successful transfer of Western industrialization to a non-Western nation and turned Japan into a world-level industrial power, as well as profoundly changing its society. This site comprises 23 components in eight areas, six of which are in the south-eastern part of the country. Miike coal mine is pictured ...

  7. Five Bridges of Amakusa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Bridges_of_Amakusa

    Five Bridges of Amakusa (天草五橋, Amakusa Gokyō) are five road bridges in southern Japan, linking the Kyushu mainland (Kumamoto Prefecture) and the Amakusa Islands. The bridges connect the islands of Ōyano-jima, Nagaura-jima, Ike-jima, and Maeshima, and were completed on September 24, 1966.

  8. Kyushu Railway History Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyushu_Railway_History_Museum

    The museum's main building was the former head office of Kyushu Railway [2] which was constructed doing 1891. In 2003 the Kyushu Railway Company opened the museum with many trains from all around Kyushu. In 2014 the main building was inscribed as a Tangible Cultural Property of Japan [3].

  9. Kumamoto Prefecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumamoto_Prefecture

    Kumamoto Prefecture is in the center of Kyushu, the southernmost of the four major Japanese islands. It is bordered by the Ariake inland sea and the Amakusa archipelago to the west, Fukuoka Prefecture and Ōita Prefecture to the north, Miyazaki Prefecture to the east, and Kagoshima Prefecture to the south.