NASA EONET layer

Natural Events Map and Guide

Recent NASA EONET source records, shown as a simple public-data layer.

Use this page to read the Natural Events layer by itself. The map focuses on recent NASA EONET records from selected categories, with notes that keep source context separate from alerts or local safety decisions.

Recent source records

NASA EONET records on the map

This page keeps the Natural Events layer selected so the map, cards, and guide stay focused on the NASA EONET record set used here.

Public source context only: useful for reading recent NASA EONET records, not an alert, warning, or instruction.

Record map

Selected natural event records

NASA EONET dots mark recent source records from selected categories. Some source area or line records use an approximate center marker for readability.

Dots are source records from NASA EONET, not LifeHubber-made severity labels. Select a dot for source details.

Layer Natural Events layer Loading

Checking the NASA EONET layer.

Items NASA EONET items Loading

Checking recent source records shown here.

Type Record type Loading

A source category when data loads.

Source Data source NASA EONET

NASA Earth Observatory Natural Event Tracker.

Record cards

Recent source records

A short list from the selected NASA EONET categories, keeping event type, source naming, and map precision visible.

Loading NASA EONET source records.

NASA EONET basics

What is EONET?

NASA EONET is a public source for natural event records connected to Earth-observing data. LifeHubber Earth uses it here as a readable layer, not as a replacement for local source pages.

Selected categories

What records appear here?

This page focuses on selected EONET categories: wildfires, severe storms, volcanoes, and landslides. The layer uses recent records from the source and keeps them separate from earthquake reports, public-health-adjacent signals, and aurora forecast data.

Map precision

Why some markers are approximate

Some NASA EONET records are points, while others can come from broader source shapes or lines. When a source record is not a single point, the map may show an approximate center marker so the record can still be read simply.

Reading guide

How to read Natural Events dots

Category

The label comes from the NASA EONET record category, such as wildfire, severe storm, volcano, or landslide.

Location

Markers follow source location data where possible. Approximate center markers are labelled when the source geometry is broader than a point.

Timing

The layer uses recent source records from the configured EONET window. Dates and details can change as source records update.

Meaning

A dot means a NASA EONET source record is being shown here. It does not tell you what to do locally or rank how serious one place is.

Source context

What to keep in mind

The Natural Events layer is useful when you want a simple view of selected recent NASA EONET records. For emergency alerts, local impact, evacuation information, or safety decisions, use official local authorities and source-specific services.

View the NASA EONET source page.

LifeHubber Earth

How this fits the site

LifeHubber Earth keeps public-data layers in their own lanes. A USGS earthquake report, a NASA EONET source record, a HantaData public signal, and a NOAA aurora forecast each need their own source context.

This page adds a focused reading path for Natural Events without turning the site into an official updates page.

Earth signals

Compare with other Earth layers

Open the main Earth dashboard when you want to compare NASA EONET records with earthquakes, aurora forecast data, and other approved public-data layers.