Earth Extremities provides timely updates on global natural events, including earthquakes, volcanic activity, space weather and extreme atmospheric conditions. Our goal is to deliver accurate, easy‑to‑understand information sourced from trusted scientific agencies, helping readers stay aware of significant developments around the world.

Earth Extremities explores the planet’s most powerful natural phenomena — from earthquakes and volcanic eruptions to solar storms and atmospheric extremes.

Each report combines verified data from scientific agencies with accessible explanations, helping readers understand how these events shape our world.

The site also features educational articles about Earth’s systems, space weather, and global monitoring networks, offering context beyond daily event updates.

Latest Global Event Reports

  • Solar Storm to strike Earth’s magnetosphere on 28th June 2026 Solar Storm
  • Magnitude 6.9 Earthquake Near Honshu, Japan Earthquake
  • Magnitude 7.5 Earthquake Yaracuy, Venezuela Earthquake

  • Satellite map of Eastern Türkiye and surrounding countries with earthquake epicenter near Bingöl and concentric shockwave rings

    Magnitude 5.0 Earthquake at Depth 16 km Strikes Eastern Turkiye on 18th July 2026

  • Cross-section of Middle America Trench subduction zone showing Cocos Plate, North American Plate, magma chamber, volcanic arc, and mantle.

    Powerful Magnitude 7.3 Earthquake at Depth 25 km Strikes Offshore Chiapas, Mexico on 17th July 2026

  • Diagram of tectonic plates beneath New Zealand showing earthquake epicenter, focus, and seismic waves

    Magnitude 5.9 Earthquake at Depth 68 km Strikes South Island of New Zealand on 16th July 2026

  • Cross-section of subduction zone showing ocean trench, accretionary prism, lithosphere, asthenosphere, subducting plate, mantle wedge, magma, faults, volcanoes, and overriding plate

    Magnitude 5.5 Earthquake at Depth 6 km Strikes Volcano Islands, Japan Region on 16th July 2026

How Solar Storms Affect Earth’s Magnetosphere
Understanding the Richter Scale
Why Volcanoes Form Along Tectonic Boundaries
How Scientists Monitor Global Seismic Activity

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