AnomalyTracker maps public reports and compares them against seismic, atmospheric, and environmental data to identify patterns that may otherwise go undocumented.
Prototype notice: Current map entries and event clusters are sample records for demonstration. Live public reporting is not yet active.
| Event ID | Date / Time (Local) | Region | Reports | Dominant Type | Signal Confidence | Status |
|---|
Describe what you heard, felt, or observed — and where it happened. Structured fields help us maintain consistent, comparable data across thousands of submissions.
Each report is automatically checked against USGS seismic data, weather records, and known industrial and aviation activity within the relevant time window.
Reports are clustered into candidate events. Clusters with no matching public data source are flagged for further research and made available for export.
AnomalyTracker is built for civic science, public-source correlation, and structured reporting. Reports are citizen submissions, not official determinations, and clusters are created to help researchers compare similar reports across time and place.
BoomLog is AnomalyTracker’s acoustic and tremor reporting layer for unexplained booms, skyquakes, and pressure-wave events.
Exact location, if provided, is used only for review and clustering. Public maps use generalized location data. Contact information is optional and never shared.
Your report has been logged and queued for review. Approved reports may appear on the public map after location fuzzing and correlation checks.