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Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
26,603 datasets
FLUXNET 2026_r1 release provides gap-filled, partitioned Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE) data from a woodland savanna site in Australia's Northern Territory. The University of Western Australia and Charles Darwin University manage the tower, which has been collecting eddy covariance measurements of heat, water vapor, and carbon dioxide since February 2007. Ancillary data includes leaf area index, soil properties, and airborne remote sensing from 2008.
The Boyagin Wandoo Woodland flux station was established in September 2017 and is located at an elevation of 484m near Perth, Western Australia. This release contains flux tower measurements of energy and mass exchange between the surface and atmosphere, processed using PyFluxPro (v3.4.21) and ONEFlux software to produce gap-filled Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE), Gross Primary Productivity (GPP), and Ecosystem Respiration (ER). The data were produced as part of the FLUXNET Shuttle project and are managed by the University of Western Australia.
Eddy covariance flux tower measurements from a wandoo woodland site near Collie, Western Australia, processed using PyFluxPro and ONEFlux software. The University of Western Australia managed the instrumentation, which collected data from August 2017 to November 2019. The final product includes gap-filled Net Ecosystem Exchange partitioned into Gross Primary Productivity and Ecosystem Respiration.
Geoscience Australia's National Gravity Compilation 2019 DGIR 1VD grid is a processed gravity anomaly dataset over Australia and its continental margins. It is derived from nearly 1.4 million gravity stations from the Australian National Gravity Database and offshore sources, with a grid cell size of approximately 435 meters. The data represents the first vertical derivative of de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies, processed from observations collected from the 1940s to September 2019.
Data from 30 July to 14 September 1999 collected by the Advanced Microwave Precipitation Radiometer (AMPR) during the First Kwajalein Experiment (KWAJEX). This dataset provides brightness temperature measurements at four microwave frequencies (10.7, 19.35, 37.1, and 85.5 GHz) for studying rain cloud systems. It was created by NASA to serve as ground validation for the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite instruments.
The 2019 Australian National Gravity Grids A series, incorporating data from the 1940s to the present day, form the basis of this dataset. It contains nearly 1.4 million gravity stations from the Australian National Gravity Database and offshore sources, processed to produce a tilt-filtered image of de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies. The grid has a cell size of approximately 435 meters and was quality-checked by Geoscience Australia geophysicists.
Australia and its continental margins are covered by this gravity anomaly grid derived from nearly 1.4 million ground and marine stations. The grid has a cell size of 0.00417 degrees (approximately 435m) and shows the half vertical derivative of de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies. Data were compiled from the Australian National Gravity Database as of September 2019, supplemented by offshore data from Scripps Institution of Oceanography, NOAA, and NGA.
Underwater still images were collected from 93 sites across the George V shelf in East Antarctica during a 2011 marine science voyage. The images were captured by the Australian Antarctic Division using a camera attached to oceanographic equipment frames and lowered to 4-5 meters from the seafloor. The survey was conducted from January 4 to February 6, 2011, along the CLIVAR SR3 Transect and around the Mertz Glacier region.
Australian Continuous Plankton Recorder survey data measures plankton dry weight as a guide to ocean health. The project is a joint effort between CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere and the Australian Antarctic Division, funded by the Integrated Marine Observing System. Results are available through the Australian Ocean Data Network portal, with data intended to be interoperable with other national and international programs.
Thomas Gerding collected air quality data during fire department live burn training exercises using direct reading instruments. The dataset is 1.1 MB in size and is available in DOCX, CSV, and XLSX formats. It was last updated on May 30, 2026.
Global solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) estimates at 0.05-degree resolution from multiple satellite instruments. The dataset includes harmonized monthly data from 2003 to 2017 from SCIAMACHY and GOME-2, daily 16-day composite data from 2014 to 2020 derived from OCO-2, and daily orbital data from 1995 to 2003 from the GOME instrument. Data were processed using machine learning techniques like Random Forest and artificial neural networks, with validation against airborne and ground-based measurements.
Version 07 is the current climate-referenced data product from NASA's Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission. The dataset provides consistent precipitation retrievals from a constellation of microwave sensors, including GMI, TMI, SSMI/S, AMSR2, MHS, ATMS, and SAPHIR, using a Bayesian algorithm. It includes near-realtime, standard, and climate products, with the climate products using ECMWF reanalysis for homogeneous long-term records.
A processed gravity anomaly grid for Australia and its continental margins, derived from approximately 1.8 million ground, airborne, and offshore observations. The grid has a cell size of 0.00417 degrees (approximately 435m) and includes a first vertical derivative calculation. Data was compiled by Geoscience Australia and sourced from government, industry, and research surveys from the 1940s to 2019.
Data from the 2011, 2013, and 2014 deployments of the Airborne Tropical TRopopause EXperiment (ATTREX) campaign, collected over California and Guam. This dataset contains in-situ measurements of trace gases, water vapor, ozone, and reactive halogen compounds from multiple instruments onboard the Global Hawk Uninhabited Aerial System. It was created to address uncertainties in physical and chemical processes within the Tropical Tropopause Layer (TTL) that affect stratospheric humidity and ozone predictions.
Beryllium isotope measurements from sediment samples collected in Prydz Bay, Antarctica. The dataset includes samples from open marine, sub-ice shelf, and subglacial depositional environments, published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters in 2019. The data was sourced from Geoscience Australia via data_gov_au.
The 2006 Strategic Environmental Assessment SEA7 Technical Report was produced for the UK Department of Trade and Industry. It reviews existing data and published sources on maritime archaeological remains in the NE Atlantic west of Scotland. The report outlines maritime activity from the Mesolithic period (9000 BC) to the present, discussing legislation, spatial distribution of remains, and potential impacts from oil and gas activities.
Nearly 1.4 million ground gravity stations and over 451,000 line kilometers of airborne surveys were used to create this national gravity grid. The compilation integrates ground, airborne, and offshore data from the 1940s to 2019 to reveal subsurface geological structures across Australia and its continental margins. Geoscience Australia processed the data, applying a tilt filter to the de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies for edge detection.
The 2019 National Gravity Compilation integrates ground observations from the 1940s to present day and offshore data from global sources. It contains approximately 1.8 million gravity observations, with nearly 1.4 million stations from the Australian National Gravity Database, processed to produce a first vertical derivative image of Bouguer anomalies. The data is processed and quality-checked by Geoscience Australia (GA) geophysicists to ensure fitness for purpose.
A 2019 gravity anomaly grid derived from approximately 1.8 million ground and offshore gravity observations. The processed data, checked for quality by GA geophysicists, reveals sub-surface geological structure. Observations were collected by government, industry, and research organizations from the 1940s to 2019.
Approximately 1.8 million gravity observations, including nearly 1.4 million ground stations, were used to create this grid. The Australian Ocean Data Network produced this image from the 2019 Australian National Gravity Grids A series, incorporating data from the 1940s to present day. It represents the first vertical derivative of de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies over Australia and its continental margins at a cell size of approximately 435 meters.