Yes, regionally.
The sparsely populated west has the most, where the Indian and Eurasian plate are colliding. The eastern half is SOMEWHAT protected by the North American plate (which actually reaches parts of Japan) and the Filipino plate. But if you look at the map, there are places that are safe-ish, but the whole country gets them.
Yes, regionally.
The sparsely populated west has the most, where the Indian and Eurasian plate are colliding. The eastern half is SOMEWHAT protected by the North American plate (which actually reaches parts of Japan) and the Filipino plate. But if you look at the map, there are places that are safe-ish, but no place they can't hit.
Yes, regionally.
The sparsely populated west has the most, where the Indian and Eurasian plate are colliding. The eastern half is SOMEWHAT protected by the North American plate (which actually reaches parts of Japan) and the Filipino plate, but over the last five hundred years there have been plenty of earthquakes recorded even in cities in the eastern mainland.
Yes, regionally.
The sparsely populated west has the most, where the Indian and Eurasian plate are colliding. The eastern half is SOMEWHAT protected by the North American plate (which actually reaches parts of Japan) and the Filipino plate, but over the last five hundred years there have been plenty of earthquakes along the East China Sea and the Sea of Japan. Not as many as along the Pacific plate east of Japan, but they do happen as the plates shift past each other.