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Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
26,700 datasets
BARREL 4E data provides housekeeping voltage, temperature, current, and payload status values recorded every 40 seconds. The BARREL Mission was a NASA Living with a Star multiple-balloon investigation from 2013 to 2016, launched from Antarctica and Sweden to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts. Over 50 stratospheric balloons carried X-ray spectrometers and magnetometers to measure relativistic electron precipitation.
Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across four campaigns from 2013 to 2016. The BARREL Mission, a NASA Living with a Star investigation, collected housekeeping voltage, temperature, current, and payload status values every 40 seconds to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Balloons were launched from Antarctic stations and Sweden's Esrange Space Center, flying at altitudes around 30 km.
BARREL 4H Ephemeris Level 2 data provides geographic and magnetic coordinates from a NASA balloon mission. The dataset includes balloon epoch time, latitude, longitude, and altitude recorded every 4 seconds from over 50 stratospheric balloon flights launched between 2013 and 2016 from Antarctica and Sweden. Geographic coordinates were obtained from onboard GPS, while magnetic coordinates were derived using the IRBEM library.
Housekeeping voltage, temperature, current, and payload status values recorded every 40 seconds by the BARREL mission's stratospheric balloons. The BARREL mission was a NASA Living with a Star investigation that launched over 50 balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016 to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Data collection was coordinated with the Van Allen Probes mission and other ground and space-based instruments.
The Tantangara and Brindabella 1:100,000 Sheet areas cover 5,030 square kilometers in the Lachlan Fold Belt of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. It details the geological history from the mid-Ordovician to the Quaternary, including sedimentation, volcanism, and deformation events. The dataset was published by the Australian Ocean Data Network and was last updated in April 2026.
Geological and geochemical data covers a 5,030 km² area within the Lachlan Fold Belt of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. The Australian Ocean Data Network compiled this information detailing rock formations, sedimentary history, volcanic activity, and mineral deposits. The dataset was last updated in April 2026.
Volume 11 of the BMR journal compiles 12 Australian geological and geophysical research papers. The publication includes studies on earthquake catalogs, continental seismic travel times, petroleum potential, and paleontological stratigraphy. It was produced by the Australian Ocean Data Network and its contents were last updated in April 2026.
Geoscience Australia's 2014–15 seismic survey data provides a reassessment of the tectonic evolution and petroleum prospectivity of the northern Houtman Sub-basin offshore Western Australia. Interpretation enabled mapping of the Moho, basement, and major syn-rift sequences, along with creation of a 3D geological model covering the survey area. This study significantly reduced exploration risk in this frontier region.
Interpretation of 2014–15 seismic reflection data enabled mapping of the Moho, basement, and major depositional sequences in this frontier basin. The study created a 3D geological model covering the survey area and mapped up to 16 km of Permian–Cretaceous sediment succession. This work was conducted by Geoscience Australia under the Australian government's precompetitive data acquisition program.
Several cylinders of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) were used as calibration standards to improve measurement comparability. The Boreal Ecosystem-Atmosphere Study (BOREAS) stored these standards in field laboratories in Saskatchewan and Manitoba from May 1994 until November 1996. The dataset is provided by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
The Lander Trough in Australia's Northern Territory is a 300 km long by 100 km wide crustal downwarp. This report details three rock sequences, including Cambrian-Ordovician sediments up to 800 meters thick, and assesses the area's petroleum potential based on comparisons to nearby basins. The Australian Ocean Data Network published this geological study, which was last updated in April 2026.
A 300 km long and 100 km wide crustal downwarp, the Lander Trough contains up to 800 meters of Cambrian and Ordovician sediments. This report details its structure, rock sequences, and petroleum potential based on recent geological mapping and geophysical data reassessment. The Australian Ocean Data Network published the findings, last updated in April 2026.
124 seismic refraction profiles were collected across six reefs in the Capricorn/Bunker group of the Great Barrier Reef. The data, managed by the Australian Ocean Data Network, identifies a seismic discontinuity at depths of 8-23 meters, correlating to the Holocene/pre-Holocene unconformity. This geophysical evidence was used to assess the influence of pre-Holocene substrate morphology on modern reef growth forms.
124 seismic refraction profiles were collected from six reefs in the Capricorn/Bunker group of the Great Barrier Reef. The dataset contains geophysical measurements used to map a subsurface discontinuity at depths of 8-23 meters, equated to the boundary between Holocene and pre-Holocene carbonates. This work was conducted by the Australian Ocean Data Network, with data last updated in April 2026.
BMR Cruise 067 collected geological, geochemical, and heatflow data over the Otway and Sorell Basins off western Tasmania. The 29-day 1987 research cruise occupied 130 sampling stations using dredges, corers, grabs, and a heatflow probe. Scientists from the Australian Ocean Data Network gathered samples to assess petroleum potential and regional geology.
A 1987 research cruise collected geological, geochemical, and heatflow data from 130 sampling stations across the Otway Basin and west Tasmanian margin. Scientists aboard the R.V. Rig Seismic gathered rock samples and sediment cores over a 29-day period to assess petroleum potential. The dataset was contributed by the Australian Ocean Data Network.
Experimental data examines the effects of temperature, salinity, and food availability on the burrowing activity of the polychaete Capitella sp. 1 and associated sediment chemistry. The dataset includes measurements from controlled laboratory experiments using pH and O2 fluorosensors. Data was contributed by the Australian Ocean Data Network and last updated in April 2026.
Australian Ocean Data Network researchers conducted laboratory experiments to quantify the effects of temperature, salinity, and food availability on the burrowing activity of the polychaete Capitella sp. 1. The study measured burrow depth, area of activity, and used pH and O2 fluorosensors to monitor associated changes in marine sediment chemistry. The dataset was last updated in April 2026.
Nauru Island's karst aquifer features a thick brackish water mixing zone where salinity increases gradationally to seawater at about 70 meters below sea level. Groundwater chemistry evolves from HCO3-Ca-Mg type to seawater, with saturation indices for carbonate minerals like dolomite and calcite increasing with salinity. This dataset from the Australian Ocean Data Network, last updated in April 2026, documents these chemical transitions.
Hydrochemical data describes the evolution of freshwater to seawater across a brackish mixing zone in Nauru Island's karstified dolomitic limestone aquifer. The dataset, provided by the Australian Ocean Data Network, was last updated in April 2026. It details saturation indices for carbonate minerals like dolomite, calcite, and aragonite across a salinity gradient.