is a double waterfall on the Ōno River in Bungo-ōno, Ōita Prefecture, Japan.
The Chinda Falls comprise, with a height of 17 m and width of 93 m, and, with a height of 18 m and width of 4 m.[1] Known locally as the "Niagara of the Ōno", they are the central feature of .[1]
As early as the fifteenth century the falls provided a subject for ink wash painting and they feature in the 1803 .[2] In 1909 a dam was built immediately upstream to provide hydroelectric power; in 1923 the height of the dam was raised to increase capacity.[2] The waterfall was subsequently reduced by rock collapses during flooding.[3] In the 1990s, with the dam itself at risk, reinforcement work was carried out by Kyushu Electric Power Company, as well as ancillary landscaping.[3] [4] In 2007 Chinda Falls was registered as a Place of Scenic Beauty.[5]
Sesshū was inspired by the waterfall to paint . Although this work was destroyed in the Great Kantō earthquake, a copy by Kanō Tsunenobu survives at the Kyoto National Museum.[6] [7] As part of the efforts to revitalise the area through promotion of its heritage, in late October each year, at the end of the rice harvest, a Sesshū Festival is staged.[1]