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Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
26,639 datasets
Seven instrumented communication towers in the U.S. Upper Midwest provide high-precision atmospheric CO2 data. Hourly and daily daytime average CO2 dry mole fractions were collected from January 2007 through December 2009 for the North American Carbon Program Mid-Continent Intensive campaign. The dataset includes measurements from five Ring 2 towers, a Missouri Ozarks AmeriFlux site, and the Rosemount tall tower observatory.
A retrospective case series report evaluating a novel therapeutic protocol for fibromyalgia. The PDF document, authored by Jesús Antonio Lara-Reyes and published on figshare in April 2026, details outcomes for three patients with refractory fibromyalgia. It describes the use of pulsed electromagnetic fields, ozone therapy, and nutritional supplementation.
A 318.7 KB PDF document authored by Jesús Antonio Lara-Reyes and last updated on 2026-04-15. It is a retrospective case series evaluating a novel protocol combining Pulsed Electromagnetic Field therapy, medical ozone insufflation, and nutritional supplementation for three patients with refractory fibromyalgia. The findings suggest the combination may induce durable physiological benefits.
A daily, 0.05-degree resolution (approximately 5.5 km) sea surface temperature analysis for the region between 45°S to 15°N and 70°W to 15°W. The Oceanographic Modeling and Observation Network (REMO) at LMA/UFRJ produces this Level 4 product using a Barnes optimal interpolation technique on blended Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) and Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission Microwave Imager (TMI) data. The analysis is validated by in situ measurements from eleven buoys of the PIRATA array.
Phase two of the Dynamic Coast research project updates historical coastal extent layers from 1890 to modern times and provides forecasts for Mean High Water Springs under High, Medium, and Low Emission Scenarios. The dataset maps and categorizes the resilience of Scotland's natural coastal defences and estimates future climate change impacts on soft coasts. It was produced by the Government Digital Service, incorporating the latest monitoring techniques and stakeholder-developed adaptation plans at five 'super sites'.
Three text files contain monthly biomass and net primary productivity (NPP) estimates from two saline grassland sites in Montecillo, Mexico, spanning June 1984 to December 1994. The dataset includes climate records from 1963-1989 and was published by ORNL_CLOUD, with documentation last updated in March 2026. It captures the ecological impact of accidental and managed fires on above- and below-ground productivity.
OCO-3 Level 2 data provides space-based measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide from the International Space Station. The dataset is produced by three high-resolution spectrometers measuring reflected sunlight in specific near-infrared and oxygen bands. It supports analysis of CO2 buildup processes and includes cloud-screening algorithms based on oxygen A-band spectra.
OCO-3 Level 2 CO2 prior data provides space-based measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide from the instrument deployed to the International Space Station in May 2019. The dataset is produced by three high-resolution spectrometers measuring reflected sunlight at specific near-infrared and oxygen A-band wavelengths to characterize processes controlling CO2 buildup. A fast Bayesian retrieval algorithm estimates surface pressure and albedo while screening for clouds and aerosols.
OMI/Aura Formaldehyde (HCHO) Total Column data provides Level-2 satellite measurements of formaldehyde concentrations in the Earth's atmosphere. The dataset contains total vertical column HCHO, associated standard errors, quality flags, and geolocation information for the sunlit portion of each orbit. It is produced by scientists from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center and distributed by NASA GES DISC.
A geological case study assessing the CO2 storage potential of the Early Cretaceous Gage Sandstone in the Vlaming Sub-basin, offshore Western Australia. The analysis integrates 2D seismic facies mapping, well log interpretation from 8 wells, and biostratigraphic data to characterize the reservoir. The Gage Sandstone reservoir has porosities of 23-30%, permeabilities of 200-1800 mD, and lies at depths suitable for supercritical CO2 injection.
NASA's Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) mission provides global, space-based measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide. The dataset incorporates prior estimates based on monthly flask records, global meteorology, and age of air, processed by three high-resolution spectrometers measuring reflected sunlight at specific near-infrared wavelengths. Version 10r represents the current, corrected data product, addressing a known geolocation error for observations from January 28 to December 31, 2020.
Version 10r data, corrected for a ~300 m pointing error affecting files from January 28 to December 31, 2020, provides meteorological parameters interpolated from a global assimilation model for each satellite sounding. The dataset supports the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) mission, NASA's first dedicated to measuring atmospheric carbon dioxide with high-resolution spectrometers at specific near-infrared wavelengths. It characterizes processes influencing CO2 buildup in the atmosphere.
Version 10r is the current version of the OCO-3 Level 2 meteorological parameters dataset. The Orbiting Carbon Observatory-3 (OCO-3) instrument, deployed to the International Space Station in May 2019, uses three high-resolution spectrometers to measure reflected sunlight for precise atmospheric carbon dioxide characterization. Its ABO2 algorithm employs a fast Bayesian retrieval to estimate surface pressure and albedo from O2 A-band spectra, aiding in cloud and aerosol screening.
OCO-3, deployed to the International Space Station in May 2019, is NASA's first mission designed for space-based atmospheric carbon dioxide measurements with the precision to characterize its buildup. The dataset incorporates Level 2 meteorological parameters interpolated from a global assimilation model for each satellite sounding. It uses three high-resolution spectrometers and a Bayesian retrieval algorithm for the O2 A-band to estimate surface pressure and albedo while screening for clouds and aerosols.
Approximately 14 orbits per day provide slant column chlorine dioxide (OClO) measurements from the Aura Ozone Monitoring Instrument. The Level-2 product includes standard errors, quality flags, and geolocation data for the sunlit portion of each orbit. Files are stored in HDF-EOS5 or netCDF format, with individual orbit file sizes ranging from about 7.5 MB to 20 MB.
A global inventory of fugitive methane emissions from oil, gas, and coal exploitation, created for the NASA Carbon Monitoring System. Emissions are allocated to infrastructure locations like mines, wells, and processing plants, based on UNFCCC country reports and IPCC 2006 methods. The inventory serves as a prior estimate for inverse modeling of atmospheric methane observations.
NASA's Earth Probe TOMS satellite captured this dataset of tropical tropospheric ozone over southern Africa during the SAFARI 2000 dry season aircraft campaign. The data consists of 9-day averaged, gridded measurements at a 1-degree by 2-degree resolution, processed by the NASA/GSFC Atmospheric Chemistry and Dynamics Branch. It covers a specific seven-week period from August 8 to September 29, 2000.
Eight gravity cores from the Southern Australian continental margin were analyzed for porewater metabolites, major and trace elements, and radiochemical data. The data were collected during Bureau of Mineral Resources survey 67 and analyzed both at sea and in Canberra. These analyses provide clues to geochemical processes important for identifying seafloor mineral formations like manganese crusts and phosphorites.
3191 km of multichannel seismic data was acquired in November 1992 to investigate the geological framework of a key seabed boundary zone between Australia and New Zealand. The survey, conducted by the Australian Ocean Data Network, aimed to define Australia's legal continental shelf, an area potentially covering about 1.65 million km². Data quality was reported as very good despite losses from bad weather and equipment repairs.
Geoscience Australia's 2014 collection of marine seismic survey navigation files, updated to include recent openfile surveys. The data is derived from a cleansed collection of P190 navigation files, which follow the UKOOA standard, and includes industry-standard metadata in the attribute tables. It is available in both KML and Shapefile formats for use in various geobrowsers and GIS applications.