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Revision as of 02:19, 6 June 2008

Use this tool to find geohashing coordinates for a given area and date.
NoTerminal and Drache at the February 19, 2008 coordinates for Portland, Oregon

Welcome to the Geohashing Community Wiki. Geohashing is a Spontaneous Adventure Generator, brought to you by the xkcd webcomic.

What is this?

xkcd comic #426, published on 21 May 2008, contains an algorithm that generates random coordinates around the world every day. Everyone in a given region gets the same set of coordinates. As such, these coordinates can be used as destinations for adventures, à la Geocaching, or for local meetups.

For a little more interactive discussion, consider joining the #geohashing IRC channel on Foonetic.

How it works

Play with the coordinate calculator at http://xkcd.com/geohashing. All coordinates refer to the WGS84 datum.

Every day, the algorithm generates a new set of coordinates for each 1°×1° latitude/longitude zone (known as a graticule) in the world. They are randomly placed -- they could be in the forest, in a city, on a mountain, or even in the middle of a lake! You can use this wiki to document the daily coordinates (geohashes) you've been to.

Unless you can accurately predict the stock market down to the penny, you can't figure out what the coordinates will be ahead of time. You can first calculate a weekday's coordinates at about 9:30am ET, and on Friday you can calculate the coordinates for each day that weekend.

When visiting geohash locations, please respect the area you are visiting. Absolutely do not litter or otherwise disturb the natural integrity of the area. However, if possible, creating some kind of a marker out of nearby materials (i.e. cairn of stones, blair-witch-style 'stick figures', etc.) is encouraged.

Disclaimer: When any coordinates generated by the Geohashing algorithm fall within a dangerous area, are inaccessible, or would require illegal trespass, DO NOT attempt to reach them. Please research each potential location before attempting to access it. You are expected to use proper judgment in all cases and are solely responsible for your own actions. See more guidelines.

Official xkcd meetups

"Welcome to my geohash" - Geohashers find post-bushfire forest regrowth west of Canberra, Australia on 1 June 2008

Official xkcd meetups happen every Saturday afternoon at that day's normal geohash coordinates. All meetups start at 4:00pm (local destination time). If you go at these times, you might encounter other readers of xkcd. Bring games!

In such cases when it is unwise to attempt to access the generated coordinates, the Saturday meetup is postponed until a day when the algorithm provides a more suitable location. Alternatively, when the coordinates fall within a body of water, you can rent a boat and win the Water Geohash achievement.

Active Graticules

Want to find geohashers in your local area? See Active Graticules for a list of graticules with active users in them.

  • Don't see your home area? Follow the format and create a page for it! We'd love to have you!
  • An interactive map is available for Google Earth or on Google Maps.
  • You can also attach your photos to this Google Maps layer.

Implementations

A full list of reference and practical implementations can be found on the Implementations page.

Recent and Upcoming Coordinates

The coordinates for the Saturday meetups on 18 May 2024 are now available. The coordinates for the next Saturday meetups, scheduled for 25 May 2024, will be based on the Dow’s opening price published at 09:30 EDT (13:30 UTC) on Friday 24 May. See timeanddate.com to convert this time to your local time zone.‎

Arrow4.png Note: To reduce the amount of content on the Main Page, a condensed table is now being used displaying only the coordinates. Please click the date links below to see the corresponding expeditions, and to add your own. --Tim P 13:42, 5 June 2008 (UTC)

Date West of -30° East of -30°
Friday 6 June 2008 Announced 13:30 UTC, 6 June. 0.523814602160174, 0.2954071527348642
Thursday 5 June 2008 0.06643914199743647, 0.18438924052414973 0.3023171947630265, 0.4839450359119979
Wednesday 4 June 2008 0.18029229786871545, 0.8450323290648286 0.7008177097112361, 0.704888801316744
Tuesday 3 June 2008 0.9579926703969455, 0.12893491871843724 0.7427834473658905, 0.6356494013762755
Monday 2 June 2008 0.5095264463869317, 0.5215911826227673 0.3859189793932023, 0.0292893119354716
Sunday 1 June 2008 0.3491079341188037, 0.9162389042702137
Saturday 31 May 2008 0.0374870832648067, 0.2812664767643918
Friday 30 May 2008 0.8531025811716042, 0.2446021959360299 0.3227205387098275, 0.7045834347042035

View expedition archives for: May 2024 | April 2024 | March 2024 | More...

Gallery of Recent Expeditions


Known Issues

Several known issues are presented at Known Issues. There is an ongoing discussion on these and other issues at Talk:Main Page.

FAQ

Q: Is there a facebook group for my area?

A: Take a look at the Facebook groups page.

Q: I tried to use the md5sum from my unix/linux command line and the hash was not the same as the comic. What is the correct command line?

A: You probably forgot the "-n" (echo without a newline). Try this to match the example:

 echo -n 2005-05-26-10458.68 | md5sum

The md5sum command may be called md5 instead.

Q: What should I bring?

A: See What to bring.

Q: What do I say to puzzled locals?

A: See Cover Stories.

Q: What do I do when I get there?

A: Poke around, take pictures, have a picnic, and, in general, have fun! The world is an adventure!

Q: How will Geohashing get me laid?

A: You never know who you might find when you show up next Saturday.

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