Earthquake Monitor for WordPress Plugin Directory
Earthquake Monitor is a WordPress app, with a 5.0 average rating from 3 reviews, as of July 9, 2026.
Earthquake Monitor is a WordPress Plugin Directory app by Cris van Geel. With a rating of 5.0★ from 3 reviews.
AppRanks verdict
Generated from live marketplace data — refreshed daily
Earthquake Monitor is a category-leading WordPress app with a limited review volume. It is listed in the Widget category on WordPress Plugin Directory, which AppRanks treats as the canonical taxonomy node for ranking and competitor comparison. 3 reviews put it in the early-traction tier — useful for early-stage stores willing to be on the leading edge. Early-traction review counts are sensitive to single launch periods or feature events, so a 30-day re-check before bigger commitments often resolves whether the trend is sustained. Paid-only pricing means evaluating fit on the marketplace listing or via the developer's documentation before installing. AppRanks tracks rating, review count, pricing tier, and category position daily — the figures on this page reflect the most recent scrape from the canonical WordPress Plugin Directory listing.
Pros
- +High average rating (5.0★) signals consistent merchant satisfaction
- +Published by Cris van Geel — established developer track record
Cons
- −Limited review base (3) — ratings can shift significantly with new feedback
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How Earthquake Monitor works
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Earthquake Monitor is a customizable widget that shows an overview of earthquakes around the world from the U.S. Geological Surveys data. You can show this in a widget (or multiple widgets) or use the shortcode [eqmonitor]. All requests can be cached so it won’t slow down your site.
Arbitrary section
The display format field is now a customizable field. You determine how the widget displays the links within the ‘limits’ of this widget.
You are allowed to use HTML tags in the display format field.
If you make the Location linkable it will link to the USGS website providing detailed information about the quake.
The date format is compatible with the date() function of PHP. See date for more information.
According to the USGV website the feeds for the past hour,day and 7 days are updated every 5 minutes. The 30 day feeds are updated every 15 minutes.
Don’t configure the cache timer too low. It will retrieve a fresh feed from an external website when the site loads. This can impact your loading times. I recommend 3600 seconds (1 hour)
Some examples to show you how the template variables work
Aprox. {hrtime} ago an earthquake with the {mag} struck {locreg} (Time {time}) . The exact latitude = {lat} and the longitude = {long}. The quake was measured at {depth_m} km depth.
would be parsed into
Aprox. 2 hours ago an earthquake with the M 0.4 struck Northern California (Time Thu 21:33:17 (UTC)) . The exact latitude = 38.8402 and the longitude = -122.8250. The quake was measured at 2.10 km depth.
All earthquakes used by the widget are placed in this HTML frame
<ul> <li>Earthquake text 1</li> <li>Earthquake text 2</li> </ul>
Only earthquakes using the shortcode [eqmonitor] can optionally be placed in ordered lists.
<ol> <li>Earthquake text 1</li> <li>Earthquake text 2</li> </ol>
PAGER (Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response) background PAGER (Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response) is an automated system that produces content concerning the impact of significant earthquakes around the world, informing emergency responders, government and aid agencies, and the media of the scope of the potential disaster.
PAGER results are generally available within 30 minutes of a significant earthquake, shortly after the determination of its location and magnitude. However, information on the extent of shaking will be uncertain in the minutes and hours following an earthquake and typically improves as additional sensor data and reported intensities are acquired and incorporated into models of the earthquake’s source.
Corresponding fatality thresholds for yellow, orange, and red alert levels are 1, 100, and 1,000, respectively. For damage impact, yellow, orange, and red thresholds are triggered by estimated losses reaching $1 million, $100 million, and $1 billion respectively.
When the PAGER information is not known, the color : GREY will be used as default.
For more info about PAGER see : [pager] (http://earthquake.usgs.gov/research/pager/)
Look and feel of the colors and/or bullets can be adjusted in the CSS file located in the /css folder of this plugin.
Icon / Images The Tsunami Icon can be changed. It is locatet at /wp-content/plugins/earthquakemonitor/images/tsunami.png
The CSS stylesheet sets the size of this image. Currently it’s 14px by 14px. ( /wp-content/plugins/earthquakemonitor/css/style.css )
Shortcode examples and parameters Example :
[eqmonitor id="unique1" cachetimer="3600" numberedlist="true" showmax="10" showlink="false" minmagnitude="7" showdaysback="190"]
Important! Each shortcode entry must have it’s own unique code (max 21 chars) . If no unique ID is provided the feed will not cache properly.
Shows a numbered list with max. 10 results without links to the USGS website for more details, with a min. magnitude of 7 from the last 190 days. Tsunami icons will be shown as if unset it will follow the defaults. Results will be cached for 3600 seconds.
This are all parameters that can be used :
showdaysback = Show events till x days ago. (default = 30) (max = 365) showmax = Show max. results (default = 5) (max = 50) minmagnitude = Min. Magnitute to show (default = 5) (min = -1 , max = 10) showlink = Results will be links to USGS (default = true) showpager = Show pager results (yellow, green , red) colors. (default = true) showtsunami = If a major event was in an oceanic region, show a little tsunami icon. (default = true) numberedlist = Use a numbered list instead of unnumbered (default = false) cachetimer = Numbers of seconds results are cached (default = 3600) id = Unique ID (max 21 chars) for shortcode. Only a-Z and 0-9 allowed. No special chars.
Category rankings
As of Jul 9, 2026- Earthquake#0of 1Top 1%
- Geological#0of 1Top 1%
- Monitor#0of 7Top 1%
- Widget#0of 701Top 1%
See 90-day rank history for each category
Track daily rank changes, category shifts, and position volatility.
Keyword rankings
Earthquake Monitor ranks for 1 keywords across WordPress Plugin Directory. Here are the top 1:
- 1.surveyRank #564
Competitors & alternatives
Earthquake Monitordoesn't have curated competitor matchups yet. Other tracked widget apps on WordPress:
Where Earthquake Monitor stands in the Widget category
Earthquake Monitor ranks #0 of 701 apps in the Widget category, placing it in the top 1% of the listing.
Frequently asked questions
What is Earthquake Monitor?
Earthquake Monitor is an app for WordPress. It currently holds a 5.0-star rating from 3 merchant reviews, and AppRanks has been tracking its public marketplace data on a daily refresh cycle. It is listed under the Widget category on AppRanks, where you can see its current category position, review-velocity trend, and how it compares against the top alternatives in the same space. Developed by Cris van Geel.
Who uses Earthquake Monitor?
Currently around 50 active stores have installed Earthquake Monitor. Its review base is still building, which usually maps to early-stage merchants and stores piloting a new workflow. It is part of the Widget category on WordPress.