Due to changes in sea level, Japan has at various times been connected to the continent by, with continental Russia to the north via the Sōya Strait, Sakhalin, and the Mamiya Strait, and with the Korean Peninsula to the southwest, via the Tsushima Strait and Korea Strait. Land bridges also connected the Japanese Islands with each other. These land bridges enabled the migration of terrestrial fauna from the continent and their dispersal within Japan.
Around 25 million years ago, the Sea of Japan began to open, separating Japan from the continent and giving rise to the Japanese island arc system of today.[1] The Sea of Japan as a back-arc basin was open both to the northeast and to the southwest by 14 Ma,[1] while marine transgression further contributed to the isolation and insulation of Japan.[2] Due to the level of tectonic activity in the area and significant subsidence of the Japanese Islands since the Miocene, exact quantification of historic sea level changes is problematic.[2]
Based on current depths, a 55m (180feet) reduction in sea level would be sufficient to connect Hokkaidō with the mainland.[3] The and — sometimes referred to jointly as the [4] or Sakhalin land bridge — are thus thought to have been in place during most glacial periods.[2] [3]
With a minimum depth of 130m (430feet) and based in part on the appearance in Japan of Proboscidea, the and — sometimes referred to jointly as the Korean land bridge[4] — are understood to have been in place at 1.2 Ma, 0.63 Ma, and 0.43 Ma.[2] [5]
A has been insufficient to connect Hokkaidō with Kamchatka during the Quaternary.[4] The southern Kuril land bridge that connected Kunashiri and the Lesser Kurils to Hokkaidō during the Early Holocene was insufficient with the rising sea level at around 6,000 BP.[6]
Honshū, Shikoku, and Kyūshū are separated by shallow straits that rarely exceed 50m (160feet) in depth.[3] Consequently, they were frequently connected together as a single land mass.[2] [3]
The Tsugaru Strait, with a depth in excess of, represents a more significant faunal boundary, known as Blakiston's Line.[3] The most recent age of the is uncertain.[7]
The Ryūkyū Islands, separated by deeper straits still (the Tokara Gap), have been isolated from the main islands throughout the Quaternary.[2] The was sufficient temporarily to connect Miyako-jima with Taiwan during the late Middle Pleistocene, allowing for the migration of the Steppe mammoth (Mammuthus trogontherii).[4] [8] During this period, the Miyako Strait was sufficient to prevent the land bridge reaching Okinawa Island.[8]