Steve's Google Map1         Built: May 28, 2016



           

      
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 Longitude:
 Elevation:

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Latitude: (±nn.nnnn)
Longitude: (±nnn.nnnn)

Ocean Trenches
Name Ocean Max Depth
Mariana Trench Pacific 1,034 m
(36,201 ft)
Tonga Trench Pacific 10,882 m
(35,702 ft)
Philippine Trench Pacific 10,545 m
(34,596 ft)
Kuril–Kamchatka Trench Pacific 10,542 m
(34,587 ft)
Kermadec Trench Pacific 10,047 m
(32,963 ft)
Izu-Bonin Trench Pacific 9,810 m
(32,190 ft)
Japan Trench Pacific 9,504 m
(31,181 ft)
Puerto Rico Trench Atlantic 8,800 m
(28,900 ft)
South Sandwich Trench Atlantic 8,428 m
(27,651 ft)
Peru–Chile Trench Pacific 8,065 m
(26,460 ft)
Aleutian Trench Pacific 7,822 metres
(25,663 ft)



Mountain Peaks
Name Country Height
Mount Everest Nepal 8,848 m
(29028.8 ft)
K2 Pakistan 8,611 m
(28251.3 ft)
Aconcagua Argentina 6,962 m
(22841.2 ft)
Denali Alaska, USA 6,191 m
(20311.6 ft)
Mount Logan Canada 5,959 m
(19550.5 ft)
Mount Kilimanjaro Tanzania 5,895 m
(19340.5 ft)
Pico Cristóbal Colón Colombia 5,700 m
(18700.7 ft)

  A remote script in this page may be vulnerable if the website USGS.gov is hacked.

About


This webpage will allow you to see earthquakes around the world in the last 24 hours (or so). The has a great site which shows earthquakes, but they seem to be lacking on showing some earthquakes in the European area. There is another site () which has earthquakes in the European-Mediterranean area. So to resolve this delima, I have built this webpage for my use. It is tested to work with FireFox browser.

Contents


Basics


When the webpage loads you will notice a map of the earth on the right. In that map you will see with a white ring. These red circles represent earthquakes shown by the USGS. Also you will notice on the left a panel with USGS earthquake data. This will periodically update (please note that updates are not automatically added to the map; you will need to use the Reload button on your browser.).


Above the USGS panel you will notice 5 radio-buttons (as shown below). These allow you to change what views in the USGS panel area. When the webpage is reloaded, the USGS panel will automatically be set to the visible panel.







Adding EMSC data to Map


Webpages are unable to copy the contents of other sites. This is a security restriction which is enforced by browsers. The EMSC webpages fall under this restriction (different Domains). So I have provided a manual method for bringing in EMSC's data into my webpage. It will require you to copy the page contents and paste them into a temporary workarea. Then you will be able to click a button to have this webpage parse the EMSC data and show them on the Google map. The steps are shown below.

[notice the circles with steps numbers in the image above]

  1. Click on the EMSC radio-button to show the EMSC panels.
  2. Click inside the EMSC small panel (this sets the focus to the EMSC's small panel).
  3. Press Ctrl-A on your keyboard (this selects all text in the EMSC small panel).
  4. Press Ctrl-C on your keyboard (this copies the selected text into the clipboard).

  1. Click on the Clear button (this will erase all text in the bottom paste panel).
  2. Now click in the bottom paste panel (this sets the focus to the bottom paste panel).
  3. Press Ctrl-V on your keyboard (this pastes your clipboard text into the bottom panel).
  4. You may want to select one of these options prior to adding your data to the map:

    Limit to last 24 hrs -- when checked, this will parse your EMSC earthquake info and then limit to showing just those earthquake which have happen 24 hours prior to pressing the Add Points button. When unchecked, all the earthquakes found in your pasted data will be shown on the map.

    Show USGS too -- when checked will include the USGS earthquake points on the map. When unchecked, only the EMSC earthquake points are shown on the map.

    [Hint: you can keep on pressing the Add Points button while changing these checkboxes and this webpage will re-parse your EMSC data each time and then plots them on the map.]
  5. Click on the Add Points button (now the webpage will process the EMSC data you pasted and populate the Google map with new EMSC earthquakes
When the webpage plots the EMSC earthquakes, it will skip over duplicates which were shown from the USGS list if you checked the Show USGS too box. To see a short summary of EMSC plotted earthquakes, you could look at the Info panel. It will show you how many duplicates which are not shown. Also, .

Info Panel