Loading...
Loading...
Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
26,660 datasets
2019 gravity data compilation for Australia, derived from nearly 1.4 million ground stations and over 450,000 line kilometers of airborne surveys collected from the 1940s onward. The grid, with a cell size of approximately 435 meters, shows the first vertical derivative of de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies. It was produced by Geoscience Australia from the Australian National Gravity Database and global offshore data.
Australia and its continental margins are covered by this gravity anomaly grid derived from nearly 1.4 million ground and offshore gravity observations. The grid has a cell size of approximately 435 meters and integrates data from the 1940s to September 2019, processed with terrain corrections and a tilt filter. Geoscience Australia and partner organizations produced this dataset to reveal sub-surface geological structure.
Nearly 1.4 million gravity stations from the Australian National Gravity Database, supplemented by global marine data, were used to create this 2019 grid. The grid shows de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies with a cell size of approximately 435 meters, derived from ground observations collected from the 1940s onward. It was processed and quality-checked by Geoscience Australia geophysicists to reveal the geological structure beneath the Earth's surface.
Geoscience Australia's National Gravity Compilation 2019 includes airborne - CSCBA 0.5VD grid is a gravity anomaly grid with a cell size of 0.00417 degrees (approximately 435m). It integrates nearly 1.4 million ground stations from the Australian National Gravity Database, 345,000 line km of airborne gravity, and 106,000 line km of airborne gravity gradiometry data, collected from the 1940s to 2019. The grid is derived from the 2019 Australian National Gravity Grids B series and processed using a fast Fourier transform to calculate a first vertical derivative of the complete spherical cap Bouguer anomaly.
The 2019 Australian National Gravity Grids B series includes data collected from the 1940s to 2019. It integrates nearly 1.4 million ground stations, 345,000 line km of airborne gravity, and 106,000 line km of airborne gravity gradiometry to produce a de-trended global isostatic residual anomaly grid at a 0.00417-degree cell size. The grid was compiled by Geoscience Australia using data from government, industry, and academic sources.
Shuo Jia published data supporting a critical review on seismic resilience of urban building portfolios on figshare. The dataset is a 35.3 KB DOCX file, last updated on 2026-05-30. The data likely contains textual information supporting the review's analysis of progress and challenges in the field.
A 2019 compilation of nearly 1.4 million gravity stations from the Australian National Gravity Database, supplemented with offshore data. The grid shows free air anomalies over Australia and its continental margins with a cell size of approximately 435 meters. Data was acquired by government, industry, and research organizations from the 1940s to 2019 and processed by Geoscience Australia.
National Gravity Compilation 2019 (CSCBA) is a complete spherical cap Bouguer anomaly grid for Australia. It is derived from nearly 1.4 million ground gravity stations in the Australian National Gravity Database as of September 2019, supplemented with offshore data. The processed data, checked for quality by Geoscience Australia geophysicists, has a cell size of approximately 435 meters and is provided in gravity units (um/s^2).
Monthly summaries contain soil temperature, soil moisture, and atmospheric variables from the Delger site in Mongolia. The dataset includes measurements for wind, humidity, air temperature, pressure, rainfall, and soil heat flux. Data were collected by NSIDC from June 2001 through November 2002 and are provided in ASCII text and Excel formats.
The Boreal Ecosystem Atmosphere Study (BOREAS) areas in Northern and Southern Saskatchewan, Canada, contain precipitation data from tipping bucket rain gauges. Measurements were recorded at 15-minute intervals from mid-April to mid-October across 1994, 1995, and 1996. This data supports analysis of rainfall patterns and amounts within the BOREAS study regions.
North American Atlantic Coast data was collected from January 2020 to March 2023 during the IMPACTS field campaign focused on snowstorms. The dataset contains vertical profile measurements from radiosondes, including temperature, wind speed, humidity, pressure, and geopotential height across tropospheric levels. It was produced by the GHRC DAAC to advance understanding of snowband formation and improve snowfall prediction models.
This dataset contains surface meteorological and ground temperature measurements from four sites on the Qingzang Plateau in China. It includes maximum, mean, and minimum air temperature, wind speed, relative humidity, solar radiation, atmospheric pressure, ground and soil temperature, soil moisture content, and soil physical properties. The data was published by investigators on the CAPS Version 1.0 CD-ROM in June 1998.
Government of Yukon field trip documentation describes significant mineral deposits in northern southeast Alaska. The trip includes regional transects in the interior Intermontane terranes around Whitehorse, Yukon, and the Insular terranes along the northern Chatham Strait region. The dataset was last updated on April 17, 2026.
A geospatial dataset classifying the interaction between groundwater and surface water for major rivers in Victoria, Australia. The dataset was collated from numerous investigations across the state and attributes a stream base layer with interaction classifications. It was produced by the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action and last updated in April 2026.
The dataset tracks actions, budgets, and resulting projects from the 2013-2020 Climate Change Action Plan in Québec as of March 31, 2023. It was published by the Government and Municipalities of Québec and allows for monitoring progress towards expected climate change mitigation results. Data is available in XLSX and PDF formats.
AMPR microwave radiometer data were collected during the 1999 TRMM-LBA field campaign to study tropical convection. Measurements include brightness temperatures at four distinct frequencies (10.7, 19.35, 37.1, and 85.5 GHz) over a five-week period. The dataset was produced by the GHRC DAAC as part of a NASA ground validation mission.
Radio Science experiment data from the Venus Climate Orbiter (AKATSUKI) spacecraft, acquired using an Ultra-Stable Oscillator. The dataset contains Doppler and signal intensity time series products stored in table format with PDS labels. It was published by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and last updated on 2026-04-10.
A seismic refraction survey conducted on the site of the Barrington (Devil's Gate) dam and power station in 1961. The survey was made for the Hydro-Electric Commission of Tasmania. The record is provided by Geoscience Australia Data.
Canada's permafrost extent and ground ice abundance are mapped based on physiographic regions from the 5th Edition National Atlas. The dataset includes point data for permafrost temperature and thickness at specific sites, plus maps of mean annual ground temperatures. It was compiled by Heginbottom, Dubreuil, and Harker and published by Natural Resources Canada in 1995.
A geospatial dataset defining the beneficial uses of groundwater resources in Victoria, Australia. It was created by the Victorian Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) and published by the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action. The dataset was last updated on April 9, 2026.