Aside from scattered bits of glass, awkwardly-bent road signs or the occasional makeshift freeway memorial, car crashes often leave few traces.
But thanks to a website called SafeRoadMaps.org, drivers can find out where and when people have died from traffic collisions.
Users can plug in a zip code, municipality or address, and the website will plot out nearby deadly crashes on a Google satellite map. The website also includes details such as the ages of drivers and passengers, whether alcohol or speeding was involved or if someone failed to put on a seat belt.
Launched by the Center for Excellence in Rural Safety at the University of Minnesota two years ago and expanded this month, SafeRoadMaps.org uses data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which draws on a variety of hospital records, police reports and government files to fully account for fatal traffic accidents.
“That ability to go right into the specifics of that fatality is something that has never been possible before,” Thomas Horan, who directs research for the University of Minnesota center, told Salt Lake City’s Deseret News.


