Tamaru Station

Tamaru Station (田丸駅, Tamaru-eki) is a railway station in Tamaki, Mie Prefecture, Japan, operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central). The station is 7.0 rail kilometers from the terminus of the Sangū Line at Taki Station.

Tamaru Station

田丸駅
Tamaru Station
Location80 Sada, Tamaki, Watarai, Mie
(三重県度会郡玉城町佐田80)
Japan
Operated byJR Central
Line(s)Sangū Line
History
Opened1893
Traffic
Passengers (FY2011)567 daily

History

Tamaru Station opened on December 31, 1893, as a station on the privately owned Sangū Railway. The line was nationalized on October 1, 1907, becoming part of the Japanese Government Railway (JGR), which became the Japan National Railways (JNR) after World War II. The current station building was completed in 1912. The station was absorbed into the JR Central network upon the privatization of the JNR on April 1, 1987. The station has been unattended since October 1, 2012.

Lines

Station layout

Tamaru Station consists of two opposed side platforms.

Platforms

1  Sangū Line For Iseshi
For Toba
2  Sangū Line for Matsusaka, Kameyama, Yokkaichi and Nagoya

Adjacent stations

« Service »
JR Sangū Line
Tokida   Local   Miyagawa
Taki   Rapid "Mie" 4 for Nagoya   Miyagawa
Tokida   Rapid "Mie" 2 for Nagoya
Rapid "Mie" 19, 21, 23, 25 for Iseshi
  Miyagawa

Surrounding area

  • Old site of Tamaru Castle
  • Tamaki Town Hall

gollark: I know, right?
gollark: This is gollarious GPT-2 with 117 million params.
gollark: Or, well, that generation pass did.
gollark: It really likes microcontrollers.
gollark: and/or absorbing impacts/optical/magnet/etc/contrahumor/magnet/etc/contrahumor/magnet/magnet/<|endoftext|>That would make it hard to make it do anything but offload it to a USB.<|endoftext|>Unless you have a USB-C.<|endoftext|>No, that's a USB-C port.<|endoftext|>Citation:* microcontrollers* microcontrollers<|endoftext|>Anyway, the code is an embedded part of the microcontrollers in a microcontrollers in the M_LEM, and can be engineered for more performant, and allows you to move items into multiple locations.<|endoftext|>No.<|endoftext|>I mean, *some* cables, but not transpters.<|endoftext|>And some WiFi cables have to be transpters for some bizarre reason.<|endoftext|>You can use a USB-C port or something.<|endoftext|>The ethernet shield thing can't replicate the ethernet shield, so it's fiddly, because it's
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.