The permanent record
Every named storm since 1851. Every plate boundary on Earth. Every day in history the ground or the sky did something worth remembering. Cross-linked to the live station when relevant.
Every named Atlantic and East Pacific tropical cyclone on file, 1851 – present. Track, intensity, landfalls, closest approach to your coordinates.
Every tectonic plate boundary on Earth, paired by the two plates that define it. Convergent, divergent, transform. Where the ground is expected to move.
One page per calendar day. Verified historical anchors plus every dispatch we've filed. Quiet days still get a page — the baseline matters.
Known-good amateur-radio nets and stations that carry hazard traffic. Hurricane Watch Net, WX4NHC, SATERN, SKYWARN, and more.
Methodology
The Atlas is built from primary public-record sources: HURDAT2 for Atlantic and East Pacific cyclones, the PB2002 plate model for tectonic boundaries, and a hand-curated set of verified historical anchors for specific dates. It rebuilds every fifteen minutes with the rest of the station, inheriting whatever new dispatches have landed in that window.
When a live dispatch falls inside the footprint of an Atlas entry — a named storm reintensifies near a known track, an earthquake strikes a known fault — the Atlas page cross-links to the live station. The reverse is also true: every live dispatch shows its Atlas context when we have it.