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| settlement_type= Core city | image_skyline= Kochi montage.jpg | imagesize= | image_caption= From top left: Katsurahama, Statue of Sakamoto Ryoma, View of Kochi from Mt. Godai, Yosakoi Festival, Harimayabashi, Tosa Electric Railway, Kochi Castle | image_flag= Flag of Kochi, Kochi.svg | image_map= Kochi in Kochi Prefecture Ja.svg | lat_deg= 33 | lat_min= 34 | lat_sec= | lon_deg= 133 | lon_min= 32 | lon_sec= | region= Shikoku | prefecture= Kōchi Prefecture | district= | mayor=Seiya Okazaki | area_km2= 309.22 | population= 340515 | population_as_of= January 2011 | density_km2= 1100 | tree=Chinaberry〔() 〕 | flower=Winter-hazel〔 | bird=Japanese Wagtail〔 | city_hall_address=5-1-45 Honmachi, Kōchi-shi | city_hall_postal_code=780-0571 | website= }} is the capital city of Kōchi Prefecture located on the island of Shikoku in Japan. Kōchi is the main city of the prefecture with over 40% of its population. As of May 31, 2008, the city has an estimated population of 340,515 and a population density of 1,100 persons per km². The total area is 309.22 km². A symbol of the city is its most famous dish, katsuo tataki, made by lightly searing and seasoning tuna.〔()〕 ==Geography and climate== The area of Kōchi has three distinct geographic sections. The major settled part of the city lies at the head of Urado Bay, in a narrow alluvial plain crossed by several rivers, notably the Kagami River and Kokubu River. The plain is bounded by mountains to the north and a range of hills to the south and west. The northern mountains form the least densely populated part of the city, with the only settlement being along narrow river valleys. The highest point in Kōchi is Kuishi-yama at . To the south of the city centre, Urado Bay cuts through the hills to its outlet into the Pacific Ocean. The land surrounding the bay and a small strip of the coastline form the third part of the city. This area, although hillier and less dense than the plain, is nevertheless a major location of housing and port-related industry. Kōchi has a very wet humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification ''Cfa''), receiving twice as much rainfall as Shikoku’s other chief cities Matsuyama and Takamatsu. It is also the most typhoon-prone of Japan’s major cities owing to its location directly exposed to the open Pacific Ocean from which the storms enter the country, and has twice received over of rainfall in a day from a typhoon. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kōchi, Kōchi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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