blog-site/src/content/blog/natural-disaster-monitoring-earthquakes-fires-volcanoes.md
On February 6, 2023, two earthquakes struck southern Turkey and northern Syria within hours of each other. Over 50,000 people died. In the first hours, before rescue teams mobilized, the clearest picture of the devastation came from seismic data, satellite fire detection, and population exposure overlays.
World Monitor aggregates exactly these data sources into a single, layered view, giving disaster monitors real-time situational awareness from the first tremor to the long-term recovery.
World Monitor integrates the U.S. Geological Survey earthquake feed for all events magnitude 4.5 and above, globally. Each earthquake appears on the map with:
The USGS feed updates within minutes of a seismic event. For major earthquakes, World Monitor's news panel typically shows wire service alerts within 5-10 minutes, giving you both the raw seismic data and the human reporting side by side.
Why it matters beyond seismology: Earthquakes trigger cascading effects. A magnitude 7.0 near an undersea cable route can disrupt internet traffic for an entire region. A quake near a nuclear facility triggers safety protocols. A tremor in a politically unstable country can accelerate instability. World Monitor shows all of these connections because the earthquake data shares the map with infrastructure, nuclear facilities, and CII (Country Instability Index) overlays. This is part of the broader approach to monitoring global supply chains and commodity disruptions.
The Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on NASA's Suomi NPP satellite detects thermal anomalies across the planet. World Monitor maps these detections with:
This isn't just wildfire tracking. Satellite fire detection reveals:
When you see a VIIRS hotspot cluster in an area where the conflict layer also shows activity, you may be looking at the thermal signature of an attack before any news outlet reports it.
NASA's Earth Observatory Natural Event Tracker (EONET) feeds into World Monitor for:
Volcanic eruptions are particularly significant for global logistics: a single eruption can close airspace for days (as Eyjafjallajokull did in 2010), disrupt semiconductor manufacturing (sulfur dioxide contamination), and affect global temperature patterns.
World Monitor tracks temperature, precipitation, and sea level anomalies that indicate developing conditions:
Raw disaster data tells you where something happened. Population exposure overlays tell you who's affected.
World Monitor integrates WorldPop population density data with disaster events to estimate:
When an earthquake strikes, the population exposure overlay immediately shows whether it hit a dense urban area or a rural region, dramatically changing the humanitarian response calculation.
Natural disasters don't just affect people. They disrupt the systems people depend on.
World Monitor's Infrastructure Cascade panel automatically calculates second-order effects when a disaster event overlaps with critical infrastructure:
A magnitude 6.5 earthquake off the coast of Portugal might not make global headlines, but if three undersea cables cross that zone, financial transactions between Europe and the Americas could slow for days. World Monitor makes that connection visible.
World Monitor integrates UNHCR displacement data to show refugee and internally displaced person (IDP) migration patterns. When a disaster strikes, you can see:
This data is invaluable for humanitarian organizations planning response operations.
World Monitor's Custom Keyword Monitors let you set persistent alerts for natural disaster terms:
Combined with the map layers, you have a complete early warning system: spatial data on the map, textual alerts in the news panel, AI analysis in the brief, and live video for ground truth.
Dedicated disaster monitoring platforms exist (GDACS, ReliefWeb, PDC Global). World Monitor's advantage isn't replacing them. It's integrating disaster data with:
A disaster doesn't happen in isolation. Its impact depends on the political stability of the affected country, the infrastructure that fails, the markets that react, and the humanitarian capacity available. World Monitor shows all of these in one view. Learn more about what World Monitor is and how it works.
How quickly do earthquake alerts appear on the map? USGS data typically updates within minutes of a seismic event. World Monitor displays all earthquakes magnitude 4.5 and above globally, with magnitude, depth, location, and timestamp.
Does World Monitor detect wildfires directly? World Monitor uses NASA FIRMS satellite data (VIIRS sensor) to map thermal anomalies with sub-kilometer accuracy. This covers wildfires, industrial fires, agricultural burning, and conflict-related fires.
Can I set up alerts for natural disasters in specific regions? Yes. Use Custom Keyword Monitors for terms like "earthquake," "wildfire," or "flood." Matching headlines from 435+ RSS feeds are highlighted in your chosen color and persist across sessions.
Monitor natural disasters in context at worldmonitor.app. USGS, NASA, and AI analysis, all in one free dashboard.