03/14 | 10:27 GMT
©AFP / Toru Yamanaka
Searchers have found 2,000 bodies in Japan's quake-hit Miyagi region, public broadcaster NHK quoted officials as saying. The Miyagi police chief has predicted the death toll will exceed 10,000 in his prefecture alone.
Panic selling saw stocks close more than six percent lower on the Tokyo bourse on fears for the world's third-biggest economy, as power shortages prompted rolling blackouts and factories shut down in quake-hit areas.
As the nation struggled with the devastation wrought by the twin disasters of a shattered land and a surging sea, tales of terror, death and miraculous survival emerged.
Focus: Japan quake threatens setback for nuclear energy
©AFPTV
But it was the fear of a nuclear disaster looming on top of the quake and tsunami that gripped the embattled nation as it struggled with a crisis described by Prime Minister Naoto Kan as the worst since World War II.
Facts: Fukushima nuclear plant
Japan has been battling to control two overheating reactors at the ageing Fukushima plant after the cooling systems were knocked out by Friday's 8.9-magnitude quake and the resulting tsunami that swallowed up whole towns.
A first explosion blew apart the building surrounding the plant's number-one reactor on Saturday but the seal around the reactor itself remained intact, officials said.
©AFP/Graphic
The plant's operator TEPCO said that six people were injured in the blast, which authorities said was probably a hydrogen explosion.
Chief government spokesman Yukio Edano said TEPCO reported that the reactor was probably undamaged and there was a low possibility of a major radiation leak at the plant, 250 kilometres (160 miles) northeast of Tokyo.
Radiation levels at the plant were "normal", the UN atomic watchdog IAEA said.
Later Monday the cooling system at the number two reactor failed, Jiji Press reported -- the sort of failure that preceded the explosions in the number one and three reactors.
Authorities have declared an exclusion zone within a 20 kilometre (12 mile) radius of the plant and evacuated 210,000 people.
©AFP / Philippe Lopez
The ship was operating at sea about 160 kilometres (100 miles) northeast of the power plant at the time and the statement by the Seventh Fleet said that the radiation level was so low that it presented no health risk.
"As a precautionary measure, USS Ronald Reagan and other US Seventh Fleet ships conducting disaster response operations in the area have moved out of the downwind direction from the site to assess the situation and determine what appropriate mitigating actions are necessary," it said.
Scene: Japanese towns become wastelands
Tsunami survivors who were able to outrun Friday's killer wave meanwhile recalled how they saw those behind them consumed by the torrent of mud and debris.
©AFP/Jiji Press/File
Related article: Outrunning the deadly tsunami
"My older sister was in a bus when the wave came behind them. The bus driver told everybody to get out of the bus and run," said Otomo, a mother of three teens who herself managed to escape the deadly wall of water in her car.
"My sister was able to get away but some people just couldn't run fast enough," she told AFP.
Otomo, whose home near Sendai was destroyed in the twin disasters, says she quickly piled her father and her dog in the car in her own desperate bid to survive.
©AFP / Toru Yamanaka
Otomo is now staying at an evacuation centre in a local school with about 1,000 other exhausted survivors who cheated death.
With ports, airports, highways and manufacturing plants shut down, the government has predicted "considerable impact on a wide range of our country's economic activities".
Related article: Digital ways to donate to Japan disaster relief
Leading risk analysis firm AIR Worldwide said the quake alone would exact an economic toll estimated at between $14.5 billion and $34.6 billion (10 billion to 25 billion euros), without taking into account the effects of the tsunami.
©AFP / Kazuhiro Nogi
The United Nations said a total of 590,000 people had been evacuated in the quake and tsunami disaster.
Japan's biggest ever earthquake sent waves of churning mud and debris racing over towns and farmland in the northeast, destroying everything in its path and reducing swathes of countryside to a swampy wasteland.
Japan committed 100,000 troops -- about 40 percent of its armed forces -- to help survivors as the world rallied behind the disaster-stricken nation and the USS Ronald Reagan began ferrying in food.
©AFP/YOMIURI SHIMBUN / Yomiuri Shimbun
The immense force of Friday's quake has moved Honshu -- the main Japanese island -- by 2.4 metres (eight feet), the US Geological Survey said.
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