Aogasima
Aogasima (ji̍t-gú: 青ヶ島) sī Ji̍t-pún lâm-pōo Micronesia siōng pak-pîng ê tsi̍t-tsō hué-suann tó. Aogasima sī Izu kûn-tó siōng lâm-pîng, siōng koo-li̍p ê ū-lâng tuà ê tó-sū,Izu kûn-tó teh tsìng-tī kah hîng-tsìng siōng sio̍k-ú Ji̍t-pún ê tsi̍t pōo-hūn; m̄-koh teh tē-lí siōng put sio̍k-ú Ji̍t-pún lia̍t-tó. Tsia--ê tó-sū kah Philippine tang-pak pōo sio-uá,keh-piah Bonin kûn-tó í-pak, Bonin kûn-tó iah siu--tio̍h Ji̍t-pún kuán-hat.[1][2] Bonin tó khiā-tī Tang-kiann í-lâm tāi-iok 358 km (222 mile) ê sóo-tsāi, kī-lī Hatizyô-zima í-lâm tāi-iok 64 km (40 mile).
Native name: 青ヶ島 | |
---|---|
Tē-lí | |
Tē-tiám | Izu kûn-tó |
Kûn-tó | Izu kûn-tó |
Area | 8.75 km2 (3.38 sq mi) |
Length | 3.5 km (2.17 mi) |
Width | 2.5 km (1.55 mi) |
Coastline | 9 km (5.6 mi) |
Highest elevation | 423 m (1388 ft) |
Hîng-tsìng | |
Ji̍t-pún | |
Kî-thañ tsu-liāu | |
Prefecture | Tokyo |
Subprefecture | Hatizyô |
Village | Aogasima |
Lîn-kàu thóng-kè | |
Population | 170-jîn (2014-nî 1-gue̍h) |
Hu-ka tsū-sìn | |
Aogasima kuán-hat Tang-kiann too Hatizyô kuān hat ē-kha ê tó-sū. Aogasima bīn-tsik uî 8.75 km2 (3.38 sq mi), tsia̍t-tsí 2014-nî, jîn-kháu uî 170-jîn. Aogasima iah teh Huzi-Hakone-Izu kok-ka kong-hn̂g ê huān-uî lāi.
Tsù-kái
siu-kái- ↑ Gotoh, H. et al. (2010). "Infrastructure Maintenance and Disaster Prevention Measures on Isolated Islands: the Case of the Izu Islands near Tokyo" in Island Sustainability (Favro, S., editor), p. 187.
- ↑ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Izu Shotō," Japan Encyclopedia, p. 412.
Tsham-ua̍t
siu-kái- List of islands of Japan
- List of volcanoes in Japan
Guā-pōo liân-kiat
siu-kái- Aogashima Village Official Website
- Aogashima - Japan Meteorological Agency (Ji̍t-pún-gí)
- "Aogashima: National catalogue of the active volcanoes in Japan" (PDF). - Japan Meteorological Agency
- Aogashima - Geological Survey of Japan
- "Aogashima". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. 2021-06-25 khòaⁿ--ê.