
Fouroverturned train carriages lie at impossibly skewed angles. A cruise ship sits on its side. Another teeters perilously on the edge of a quay.
All had been flung from their courses by the devastating force of the tsunami, but pictured from above – in such unlikely settings – they appear almost as toys scattered by a child who has grown bored with playing.
Elsewhere, terrified survivors wait to be rescued atop a building in Kesennuma, in north-east Japan, after fashioning a giant SOS sign from bedsheets.
And residents in Rikuzentakata can be seen on the roof of a block of flats that appears to have been put through a shredder.
These were the apocalyptic scenes captured from the skies above north-eastern Japan yesterday.
Four entire trains carrying hundreds, possibly thousands of passengers, vanished after the earthquake. At least one was a high-speed Japanese ‘bullet’ train. Rail operators lost contact with them as they operated on coastal lines on Friday.
East Japan Railway Company admitted it did not know how many people were on board.
As well as the ships seen here, a cruise liner is said to have simply vanished with hundreds of holidaymakers on board.
Kesennuma – near the off-shore epicentre of the magnitude 8.9 quake – has been burning furiously, with broadcasters reporting that fires are spreading out of control.
Aerial footage of the city, home to 74,000, shows the whole area engulfed in flames.

Witnesses said the fires were caused after the tsunami smashed into cars, causing them to leak oil and gas. They described a city of ‘fire and water’ – what is not ablaze is submerged.
Officials said the number of dead was likely to soar as thousands were still unaccounted for. An estimated 215,000 survivors have been placed in makeshift shelters.
A huge international rescue effort was also underway and a British team was preparing to fly out. The fate of residents of the shredded flats of Rikuzentakata, also on the north-east coast, was not clear last night.
Footage broadcast on Japanese TV showed that minutes before the tsunami struck, it appeared a typical Japanese town moving towards rush hour, with hundreds of cars on the roads.
Then, as the torrent of water sweeps in, the entire region merges into the sea, causing a flood that few would be able to survive.
Many homes were crushed beneath the intense pressure of the first barrage of water which left behind a tangled mess of wrecked wooden buildings. Cruelly, many others that initially stood firm were washed away when the ferocious waves continued to roll in from the Pacific.




Tired: A young girl watches the news in a community centre after being evacuated from areas surrounding the Fukushima nuclear facilities following the earthquake


Catastrophe: A soldier carries an elderly man on his back to a shelter in Natori city, Miyagi prefecture




Scattered: Train carraiges were thrown from the line in Fukushima and ships were tossed ashore by the tsunami in Aomori province



Dangerous work: Nuclear officials cover themselves head to toe in protective gear as they deal with those people who have been evacuated and right, one of the women who was taken out of her home is scanned for radiation


Aftermath: Evacuees walk through the rubble of collapsed houses in Sendai, Miyagi today while right a derailed train carriage and piles of debris litter the landscape that will be scarred by the devastation for years to come


Endeavour: Rescue workers carry a body found in the debris in the town of Soma, Fukushima Prefecture, left, while stranded survivors use whatever they can find to escape the ruins of the disaster in Kesennuma City, Miyagi Prefecture

Run aground: A container ship stranded, swept half ashore, in Sendai, north-eastern Japan















Source:dailymail.co.uk
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