Loading...
Loading...
Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
26,178 datasets
Keewatin - Southern Baffin Island Basin freshwater quality data from over five sites, collected for at least 15 years. Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) and Parks Canada conduct this monitoring to assess status, trends, and the effectiveness of regulatory measures. The dataset includes measurements for nutrients, metals, major ions, and other physical-chemical variables.
Finland's Gulf of Finland region is the focus of this radar reflectivity dataset from the Kerava dual-polarimetric C-Band Doppler radar. It was collected during the Global Precipitation Measurement mission's Light Precipitation Validation Experiment field campaign from September 21 to October 20, 2010. The data aims to improve satellite precipitation algorithms by providing high-latitude, ground-based measurements of light rainfall systems.
The Churchill River basin in Canada is monitored for long-term freshwater quality. Environment and Climate Change Canada collected data for over 15 years from three sites, measuring nutrients, metals, major ions, and other physical-chemical variables. This data supports water quality assessment, trend detection, and the activities of the Prairie Provinces Water Board.
Long-term freshwater quality monitoring data for six sites in the Assiniboine - Red River Basin for the past 15 years or longer. Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) collected this data to assess status, detect trends, and track the effectiveness of regulatory decisions. The information supports the Lake Winnipeg Basin Initiative and the Prairie Provinces Water Board.
September 20 to October 20, 2010, this dataset contains Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model simulations for the Light Precipitation Validation Experiment (LPVEx) field campaign around the Gulf of Finland. It provides synthetic atmospheric data to support the validation and improvement of Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) satellite algorithms for light rainfall in high-latitude regions. The data is stored in netCDF-3 format.
Over 15 years of long-term freshwater quality monitoring data for more than 10 sites in Canada's Arctic Coast - Islands Basin. The dataset includes measurements for nutrients, metals, major ions, and other physical-chemical variables. It is collected by Environment and Climate Change Canada in collaboration with Parks Canada to assess status, trends, and regulatory effectiveness.
Geoscience Australia Data released the National Gravity Compilation 2019 - CSCBA 0.5VD image, a processed gravity anomaly grid. The grid is derived from nearly 1.4 million ground stations and over 450,000 line km of airborne surveys, with data collected from the 1940s to 2019. It covers Australia and its continental margins with a cell size of approximately 435 meters.
Approximately 1.8 million gravity observations, including nearly 1.4 million ground stations and airborne surveys totaling 451,000 line kilometers, were used to generate this grid. The dataset is a half vertical derivative image of complete Bouguer anomalies derived from the 2019 Australian National Gravity Grids B series, processed by Geoscience Australia. It integrates ground data from the Australian National Gravity Database, offshore global gravity data, and airborne surveys to reveal sub-surface geological structure.
A 2019 compilation of gravity data for Australia and its continental margins, derived from approximately 1.8 million observations. The dataset includes ground measurements from the Australian National Gravity Database, supplemented by 345,000 line km of airborne gravity and 106,000 line km of airborne gravity gradiometry data, as well as offshore data from global sources. It was processed by Geoscience Australia to produce a de-trended global isostatic residual anomaly image with a cell size of approximately 435 meters.
A 2019 spherical cap Bouguer anomaly grid for Australia, derived from nearly 1.4 million gravity stations in the Australian National Gravity Database as of September 2019, supplemented with offshore global data. The grid has a cell size of 0.00417 degrees (approximately 435 meters) and data are provided in gravity units (um/s^2). This compilation was processed and quality-checked by Geoscience Australia geophysicists.
The Arrinthrunga Formation documents a complex Upper Cambrian carbonate sequence deposited in an extensive, intermittently emergent epeiric sea. Australian Ocean Data Network hosts this geological dataset, which likely contains stratigraphic and lithological information. The record was last updated in May 2026.
Approximately 1.8 million gravity observations, including nearly 1.4 million ground stations and over 450,000 line kilometers of airborne surveys, were used to create this grid. Geoscience Australia compiled and quality-checked the data, which integrates ground observations from the 1940s onward with offshore and airborne sources. The resulting grid has a cell size of 0.00417 degrees and shows the tilt filter of complete Bouguer anomalies over Australia and its continental margins.
Nearly 1.8 million gravity observations, including 1.4 million ground stations and 451,000 line kilometers of airborne surveys, were processed to create this 2019 grid. Geoscience Australia compiled data from Commonwealth, State, industry, and university sources dating from the 1940s to present. The resulting 0.00417-degree cell grid shows a half vertical derivative of complete Bouguer anomalies for geological interpretation.
NASA's Microwave Atmospheric Sounder on Cubesat (MASC) CPEX dataset contains atmospheric products from an instrument onboard the DC-8 aircraft. Data was gathered during sixteen missions from May 27 to June 21, 2017, as part of the Convective Processes Experiment field campaign in the North Atlantic-Gulf of America-Caribbean Sea region. The dataset is stored in HDF-5 format.
Nearly 1.4 million ground gravity stations, plus 345,000 line km of airborne gravity and 106,000 line km of airborne gravity gradiometry data, were used to generate this 2019 grid. The dataset, produced by Geoscience Australia, combines decades of data from government, industry, and research sources to create a processed image showing the tilt of de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies. The grid has a cell size of approximately 435 meters and is intended to reveal the geological structure beneath Australia's surface.
23 aggregated science data sets provide monthly, global cloud property observations on a 1x1 degree grid. This Level 3 product is derived from daily MODIS data and is designed for climate scientists working with models and observations. The Collection 6.2 version includes fixes for bugs identified in the previous C6.1 release.
The Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions conducts routine water quality monitoring in the Swan Canning catchment. Data from the 2019 monitoring program is stored in the Water Information Network database and used to assess system response to management actions and report against nutrient reduction targets. The dataset is publicly available via the Water Information Reporting portal.
A refined geospatial dataset mapping the relative density of terrestrial Groundwater Dependent Ecosystems (GDEs) across Victoria, Australia. This dataset addresses overestimation issues in the original 2010 mapping by Dresel et al. by weighting areas from very low to very high GDE density. The Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action provides this data under a CC-BY-4.0 license, last updated in April 2026.
Gridded estimates of annual severe hailstorm frequency derived from satellite-borne passive microwave imagery. The dataset spans from January 1, 1998, through March 31, 2025, with a specific product ending on September 30, 2014 due to the TRMM mission conclusion. These data products are produced by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for weather and climatological research.
A 1960 survey conducted at the request of the Irrigation and Water Supply Commission of Queensland. The record describes seismic refraction surveys at three dam sites on Barambah Creek near Murgon, with results plotted as cross-sections showing depth and velocity of subsurface layers. The data was interpreted by Geoscience Australia to identify geological features like fault zones and weathered bedrock.