Have you been following the discussion about continuum mechanics, vorticity and the stress tensor started in the Geo-Tectonics list a few weeks ago? Oh, have you missed it?
Then this cartoon will bring you up to date...


Find the poster here: http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eqarchives/poster/2011/20110311.php
More and more data comes to light after the massive earthquake in Japan last week. As Callan Bentley points out in his blog, the vertical component of the displacement vector field shows a general subsidence in all the East coast of Honshu (Japan's main island). The maximum subsidence is 75 cm, while the horizontal displacement has been of up to ca. 4.4 m (eastwards).
In 1700, that happened in Cascadia (http://blog.lib.umn.edu/stgeorge/geog5426/2010/11/13/Jacoby%20Geology/201997.pdf), when a massive earthquake caused the subsidence of a region, where many trees drowned and just a handful of them survived... for telling us through their ring what happend with the topographic base level. (Photo from here)
The powerful earthquake of 11th of March in the island of Honsu (Japan) has shortened the day length in 1.8 µs (microseconds, or millionths of a second), has declared Richard Gross from NASA's JPL in Pasadena, CA (USA). Gross has calculated the change in inertia moment, after the deadly earthquake has changed the distribution of Earth's mass.

But, we may think: "Every year it seems that more people die because of natural catastrophes". Well, it may seem like that until we take a look to the statistics, and then this idea simply vanishes.
One of the strongest earthquakes in recent history ( 8.9 Mw) has struck Japan some hours ago, and surely you are well informed by now. In any case, you can find up to date information in the following websites:
Tectonic Summary
Scientific data about the earthquake, from USGS