It is clear from the passage that Pacific salmon are most commonly found in Japanese waters
Tokyo's Tsukiji fish market is close to the sea
the Japanese prepare Pacific salmon in a variety of ways
the only fish eaten in Japan is the Pacific salmon
the Japanese don't eat meat
In Tokyo's Tsukiji fish market only Pacific salmon are sold
salmon are processed into burgers and sausage
over 300,000 tons of fish are sold every year
only frozen fish are available
work starts very early in the morning
It is stated in the passage that the Japanese consume three times as many fish as the rest of the world
the Japanese eat more Pacific salmon than any other nation
fishing is Japan's biggest industry
the only fish market in Japan is Tokyo's Tsukiji
Tokyo's Tsukiji fish market sells a third of the world's total catch of fish
10 THE MUSEUM ROBBERY It was, Italian authorities said later, as if the thieves had a catalog and knew just what they were after. Armed bandits bound and gagged six unarmed guards, entered a storeroom containing artifacts from the Roman town of Herculaneum, and stole about 280 objects - gold rings, bracelets, earrings, and precious stones. All had been discovered during excavations of the seaside town, buried by the same eruption of Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79 that destroyed its larger and better-known neighbor, Pompeii. Authorities said that the stolen items also included a small bronze statue of Bacchus inlaid with copper and silver, a bronze vase, and a box of coins. The total value of objects taken during the robbery was estimated at 1.6 million dollars. Art historians and others criticized lax security that permitted two gunmen to climb a wall, enter the site, and break through a flimsy partition to get into the room where the artifacts were kept. Some of the critics also complained that the guards were unarmed. Officials said it would be hard for anyone to sell the stolen objects because all had been catalogued and photographed, and most had been exhibited and published.