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    Usgs Quakes Mcp

    An MCP server for querying the USGS Earthquake API with natural language

    1 stars
    JavaScript
    Updated Aug 10, 2025
    claude
    modelcontextprotocol
    usgs-api
    usgs-earthquake

    Table of Contents

    • Overview
    • Sample Output
    • Installation
    • Installing via Smithery
    • Manual Installation
    • Extra Steps
    • Connecting with Claude Desktop
    • Troubleshooting

    Table of Contents

    • Overview
    • Sample Output
    • Installation
    • Installing via Smithery
    • Manual Installation
    • Extra Steps
    • Connecting with Claude Desktop
    • Troubleshooting

    Documentation

    MseeP.ai Security Assessment Badge

    usgs-quakes-mcp

    smithery badge

    Claude MCP server for USGS Quakes API

    An MCP server implementation for providing access to the USGS Quakes API within Claude Desktop.

    Overview

    This Model Context Protocol (MCP) server enables AI assistants and applications to:

    • Get earthquake data through a wide variety of search parameters
    • Get details about a specific earthquake

    Users can run queries using natural language.

    Sample Output

    Q: find earthquakes over 2 magnitude in florida over the last 20 years

    A: I'll help you search for earthquakes in Florida with a magnitude greater than 2.0 over the past 20 years.

    View Result from find-earthquakes from usgs-quakes (local)

    json
    {
      "endTime": "2024-12-28T23:59:59",
      "startTime": "2004-12-28T00:00:00",
      "maxLatitude": 31.000888,
      "minLatitude": 24.396308,
      "maxLongitude": -80.031362,
      "minLongitude": -87.634896,
      "minmagnitude": 2
    }

    Based on the USGS earthquake data, there have been three notable earthquakes in or near Florida over the past 20 years:

    1. A magnitude 5.9 earthquake in the Gulf of Mexico on September 10, 2006

    Located offshore at coordinates 26.319°N, 86.606°W

    Depth: 14 km

    This was the largest earthquake in the region during this period

    It was widely felt, with 5,763 people reporting feeling the quake

    2. A magnitude 2.8 earthquake near Jay, Florida on March 6, 2019

    Located at coordinates 30.9718°N, 87.1719°W

    Depth: 5 km

    49 people reported feeling this earthquake

    3. A magnitude 2.7 earthquake near Century, Florida on March 24, 2019

    Located at coordinates 30.9622°N, 87.2384°W

    Depth: 5 km

    4 people reported feeling this earthquake

    It's worth noting that Florida experiences relatively few earthquakes compared to more seismically active regions of the United States. The two 2019 earthquakes occurred in the Florida panhandle, while the larger 2006 event was offshore in the Gulf of Mexico.

    Q: get the details of the Jay Florida earthquake

    A: I'll get the detailed information about the magnitude 2.8 earthquake that occurred near Jay, Florida.

    View Result from find-earthquake-details from usgs-quakes (local)

    json
    {
      "eventid": "us1000jbw4"
    }

    Here are the key details about the Jay, Florida earthquake:

    Date and Time: March 7, 2019, at 04:45:52 UTC

    Location: 2 km (1.2 miles) Northwest of Jay, Florida

    Coordinates: 30.9718°N, 87.1719°W

    Depth: 5 kilometers (3.1 miles)

    Magnitude: 2.8 mb_lg (body wave magnitude)

    Additional details:

    • 49 people reported feeling the earthquake
    • The Community Internet Intensity Map (CIIM) showed a maximum intensity of 2.7
    • There was no tsunami generated
    • The earthquake was reviewed and confirmed by USGS scientists
    • The location had a horizontal error margin of about 6.2 km
    • The magnitude calculation used data from 11 seismic stations
    • The earthquake was also detected by the New Mexico seismic network (NM), which calculated a slightly different magnitude of 2.63

    Technical measurements:

    • Azimuthal gap: 243 degrees (indicates moderate coverage by seismic stations)
    • RMS error: 0.59 (indicates reasonable quality of the location estimate)
    • Minimum distance to nearest station: 0.222 degrees
    • Standard error for magnitude: 0.154

    This was a relatively minor earthquake, but notable for Florida which rarely experiences seismic activity. The fact that it was felt by 49 people suggests it was noticeable to residents in the immediate area, though no significant damage would be expected from an earthquake of this magnitude.

    Installation

    Installing via Smithery

    To install USGS Earthquake Data for Claude Desktop automatically via Smithery:

    bash
    npx -y @smithery/cli install @blake365/usgs-quakes-mcp --client claude

    Manual Installation

    Installing this might be tricky if you're not familiar with Node.js and the MCP protocol.

    1. Install Node.js

    2. Clone this repository to a folder on your local machine

    3. The server is already built so you can skip the build step.

    Extra Steps

    If you want to make changes to the server you can do so by editing the src/index.ts file.

    • Run npm install to install dependencies
    • Run npm run build to build the server
    • Quit and restart Claude Desktop after making changes

    Connecting with Claude Desktop

    1. Open your Claude Desktop configuration at:

    • macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
    • Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json

    2. Add the server configuration:

    json
    {
        "mcpServers": {
            "usgs-quakes": {
                "command": "node",
                "args": [
                    "/Full/Route/to/Folder/usgs-quakes/build/index.js"
                ]
            }
        }
    }

    3. Close/Quit then restart Claude Desktop

    Once you restart you should see a small hammer icon in the lower right corner of the textbox. If you hover over the icon you'll see the number of MCP tools available.

    Troubleshooting

    If you get errors when running the server you may need to provide the full path to the node command. For example, on macOS: /usr/local/bin/node

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