⚡ REAL-TIME — UPDATED EVERY 5 MIN

Deformation Monitoring Dashboard

Live global earthquake activity from USGS, real-time CORS station network status, and ground motion intelligence — all in one professional dashboard. Built for land surveyors, structural engineers, and geomatics professionals.

📡 Data sources: USGS · EMSC · IGS · EUREF-EPN · NGS·🔓 Free, no signup required·🔄 Auto-refresh 5 min

🗺️ Live Global Map

Click any earthquake circle to see details. Toggle layers using the filter panel. CORS stations shown in cyan dots — these are continuously operating GNSS reference stations used for high-precision surveying and deformation monitoring.

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What is Deformation Monitoring?

Deformation monitoring is the systematic measurement of ground or structural movement over time. It's critical for dams, bridges, tunnels, buildings, and earth subsidence. Modern monitoring uses GNSS, total stations, InSAR, and laser scanning.

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CORS Stations Role

Continuously Operating Reference Stations (CORS) provide centimeter-level GNSS positioning critical for monitoring. Networks like NGS (USA), EUREF (Europe), and IGS (global) operate 24/7. They detect even millimeter-level ground motion.

Browse CORS stations →
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Earthquake Impact on Surveys

Even small earthquakes (M4-5) can shift survey benchmarks by centimeters within hundreds of kilometers from the epicenter. Surveyors working on long-term projects must monitor seismic activity and re-verify control points after significant events.

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How to Use This Dashboard for Professional Surveying

Pre-Project Risk Assessment

Before starting any high-precision survey project, especially deformation monitoring or geodetic control surveys, use this dashboard to assess recent seismic activity in your project area. Earthquakes of magnitude 4.5 or higher within 100 km of your project can introduce measurable error in benchmark coordinates.

Workflow: Set the magnitude filter to 4.0+ and time range to "30 days", then zoom to your project area. If multiple events are visible, plan to re-occupy your primary control points and run a verification adjustment before delivering final coordinates.

Real-Time Monitoring of Active Construction Sites

For active infrastructure projects (dams, bridges, high-rises, tunnels), continuous monitoring is critical. Combine the dashboard's real-time earthquake feed with on-site total station automatic measurements (ATR), GNSS receivers, and InSAR analysis for a comprehensive monitoring stack.

Bookmark this page and check daily — significant earthquakes within your monitoring area trigger immediate site verification protocols. CORS stations within 50 km of your site should be checked for any data gaps or jumps in their published coordinate time series.

Educational Use for Survey Students

Surveying and geomatics students can use this dashboard to study real-world ground deformation patterns. Recommended exercises:

  • Identify the global "Ring of Fire" by zooming to the Pacific Rim
  • Correlate CORS station density with regions of high seismic activity
  • Examine the relationship between earthquake depth and surface deformation impact
  • Compare convergent vs transform plate boundary signatures

Data Sources & Accuracy

All earthquake data is sourced from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) via their public FDSN (Federation of Digital Seismograph Networks) API. Updates occur within 1-10 minutes of detection. Magnitude values follow the moment magnitude scale (Mw) for most events, with body wave magnitude (mb) used for smaller events.

CORS station data is sourced from our internal database, which aggregates the IGS (International GNSS Service), EUREF-EPN (European Reference Frame), NGS CORS (USA), RGP (France), and selected regional networks. Station status is updated nightly via our harvester scripts.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How often is the data refreshed?

Earthquake data refreshes every 5 minutes automatically. CORS station data is cached server-side and updated nightly (the underlying coordinate accuracy is constantly maintained at the source networks).

Q: Can I embed this map on my own website?

Yes — we are preparing an embeddable widget version. Subscribe to our updates or check back in a few weeks. Meanwhile, you can link directly to surveyingpedia.com/monitoring with attribution.

Q: Why don't I see earthquakes below magnitude 2.5?

The USGS public catalog only routinely publishes earthquakes above M2.5 globally (lower thresholds vary by region). The default minimum magnitude is set to 4.5 to show globally significant events; you can lower this to 2.5 using the filter.

Q: Is this dashboard suitable for emergency response?

No. This dashboard is intended for educational and professional surveying use. For emergency response, always consult official sources: USGS Earthquake Hazards Program, your national seismological service, or local civil protection authorities.

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