Atera Seven Falls
Atera Seven Falls is a waterfall in the city of Shinshiro, Aichi Prefecture, Japan. It has been protected as both a Place of Scenic Beauty and Natural Monument since 1934. The waterfalls was named one of "Japan’s Top 100 Waterfalls", in a listing published by the Japanese Ministry of the Environment in 1990.
Overview
The Atera Seven Falls are located on the Atera branch of the Toyokawa River within the Tenryū-Okumikawa Quasi-National Park. As the river flows down from the Nasuyama Plateau, it crosses a conglomerate fault scarp composed of middle and Paleozoic rock gravel such as sandstone, mudstone and granite. The falls are broken into a series of composed of middle and Paleozoic rock gravel such as sandstone, mudstone and granite. The first waterfall has a height of from the bottom. The second is, the third is, the fourth waterfall is, the fifth waterfall is, the sixth waterfall is, the seventh waterfall is, for a total length of over a drop in elevation of. Only the first four tiers can be seen from below. The force of the falling water has created basins at the base of each fall, especially the second waterfall, which has a depth of and the fifth fall which has a depth of.According to legend, a young onmyōji Abe no Seimei named this waterfall when he came here to meditate during the early Heian period.