China News Service, September 21. According to Kyodo News, on the 20th, the "Great East Japan Earthquake and Atomic Disaster Inheritance Museum" in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, opened to the public in Futaba Town where the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant is located.

It is said that the museum aims to leave the memory and lessons of the nuclear accident to future generations, convey the chaos and rebuild the footprints after the nuclear accident, and prevent the incident from being forgotten.

Data map: Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Japan.

  According to reports, the museum was built in an area hit by the tsunami. It is a three-story building on the ground and cost about 5.3 billion yen (about 340 million yuan).

  According to the report, the venue is divided into 6 areas, introducing the occurrence and reconstruction process of major earthquakes and nuclear power plant accidents in chronological order.

The Fukushima prefectural government collected about 240,000 related materials for the opening of the museum. There are also 29 explanation team members in the museum who will tell their personal experiences.

  In addition, part of the "Reconstruction Memorial Park" constructed by the Central Government of Japan and the Fukushima Prefecture Government adjacent to the museum will also be open from the 20th.

  On March 11, 2011, a strong earthquake occurred in the northeastern waters of Japan and triggered a huge tsunami, causing about 16,000 deaths and 2,533 people missing.

Affected by the earthquake and tsunami, a large amount of radioactive materials leaked from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, causing a serious nuclear accident.