Loading...
Loading...
Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
27,096 datasets
Australia and its continental margins are covered by a gravity anomaly grid derived from approximately 1.8 million observations. The grid, with a cell size of about 435 meters, combines ground, airborne, and offshore data from the 1940s to 2019. Geoscience Australia produced this first vertical derivative image from de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies.
Approximately 1.8 million gravity observations, including nearly 1.4 million ground stations and 451,000 line km of airborne surveys, were used to generate this grid. The data, compiled by Geoscience Australia, measures subsurface rock density variations and includes observations from the 1940s to 2019. It provides a de-trended global isostatic residual anomaly grid at a 0.00417-degree cell resolution.
Australia and its continental margins are covered by this gravity anomaly grid with a cell size of approximately 435 meters. The grid is derived from nearly 1.4 million ground stations and over 450,000 line kilometers of airborne surveys, processed by Geoscience Australia. It represents the half vertical derivative of the complete spherical cap Bouguer anomaly, calculated via a fast Fourier transform.
Eight-day global atmospheric data from the AIRS instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite, gridded at 1-degree resolution. This product provides averaged means, standard deviations, and counts for thermodynamic parameters like temperature profiles and cloud properties, as well as trace gases including carbon monoxide, methane, and ozone. The dataset is produced by the GES DISC and is available on NASA Earthdata and Data.gov.
Spain's environmental data includes metrics on population in drylands, degraded land area, water stress, groundwater status, and water erosion estimates. The dataset, created by Jaime Martinez-Valderrama, is aggregated at autonomous community, province, or river basin district levels. It was last updated in April 2026.
A gravity anomaly grid for Australia and its continental margins, derived from approximately 1.8 million ground and airborne observations. The grid, with a cell size of 0.00417 degrees (~435m), was generated by Geoscience Australia using data from the 1940s to 2019, including nearly 1.4 million ground stations and 451,000 line km of airborne surveys. It applies a tilt filter to the de-trended global isostatic residual (DGIR) to highlight edges of geological units.
Geoscience Australia's 2019 DGIR tilt grid is a geophysical dataset derived from approximately 1.8 million gravity observations. The grid has a cell size of 0.00417 degrees (approximately 435m) and shows a tilt of de-trended global isostatic residual anomalies over Australia and its continental margins. Data sources include the Australian National Gravity Database as of September 2019 and offshore data from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
Nearly 1.4 million gravity stations from a national database were used to create this tilt-filtered grid. The data combines ground observations from the 1940s onward with offshore gravity data, processed with terrain corrections. Geoscience Australia released this grid, which has a cell size of approximately 435 meters and covers Australia and its continental margins.
Global atmospheric data from the AIRS instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite provides monthly averaged geophysical parameters on a 1-degree latitude/longitude grid. The dataset includes thermodynamic variables like temperature profiles, cloud properties, and surface parameters, alongside trace gas concentrations for carbon monoxide, methane, and ozone. It is produced by NASA's GES DISC.
Project 121.37 describes a 28-day multi-institutional marine survey conducted in September-October 1992 aboard the BMR vessel Rig Seismic on the NSW continental margin. The survey, involving Geoscience Australia, Sydney Water Board, and Sydney University, aimed to collect baseline environmental data on sediment composition and distribution. Its primary objectives included monitoring anthropogenic contaminants and assessing non-renewable resources in the offshore Sydney Basin.
Geoscience Australia's National Gravity Compilation 2019 integrates approximately 1.8 million gravity observations, including ground stations and airborne surveys totaling 451,000 line kilometers. The dataset includes a de-trended global isostatic residual (DGIR) tilt image processed via Fourier transform to highlight geological edges. It combines data from government, industry, and research sources collected from the 1940s to 2019.
Geoscience Australia's 2019 National Gravity Compilation is a processed gravity anomaly grid derived from approximately 1.8 million ground and airborne observations. The grid has a cell size of 0.00417 degrees (approximately 435m) and includes data acquired from the 1940s to 2019, supplemented by offshore global gravity data.
Geoscience Australia's National Gravity Compilation 2019 tilt image is derived from nearly 1.4 million ground gravity stations and offshore data. The grid has a cell size of approximately 435 meters and covers Australia and its continental margins. Data were collected from the 1940s to 2019 by government, industry, and research organizations.
Approximately 1.8 million gravity observations, including nearly 1.4 million ground stations, were used to generate this grid. The National Gravity Compilation 2019 DGIR tilt image is a processed geophysical grid showing edge-detected gravity anomalies over Australia and its margins, produced by Geoscience Australia. It combines ground data collected from the 1940s onward with offshore data from global sources, processed to a cell size of approximately 435 meters.
A gravity anomaly grid for Australia and its continental margins, derived from approximately 1.8 million observations. The grid combines ground data from the Australian National Gravity Database, offshore data from global sources, and airborne gravity surveys totaling 451,000 line kilometers. Geoscience Australia compiled and quality-checked the data, which incorporates measurements from the 1940s to 2019.
The George Vth Basin on the East Antarctic margin contains recently discovered drift deposits. The dataset likely contains evidence from 35 kHz sub-bottom profiling and sediment cores, providing information on Holocene palaeoceanography and bottom current activity. It was aggregated by the Australian Ocean Data Network and last updated on 2026-04-10.
Harvard Dataverse hosts replication data for a 2026 political science paper. Alexander Cohen authored the dataset supporting the paper 'Changing Policy in a Changing Climate: How Intermittent Advocacy By Diverse Groups Influences Legislative Outcomes'. The dataset likely contains variables related to advocacy campaigns and legislative outcomes.
Comprising flux tower measurements of energy and mass exchange between the surface and atmosphere using eddy covariance techniques. Data were processed with PyFluxPro (v3.4.18) to produce gap-filled Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE) partitioned into Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) and Ecosystem Respiration (ER). The site is a cattle grazing station in a tall open savanna near Townsville, Queensland.
Aggregating flux tower measurements of energy and mass exchange between the surface and atmosphere using eddy covariance techniques. Data were processed with PyFluxPro (v3.4.18) to produce a final, gap-filled product including Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE), Gross Primary Productivity (GPP), and Ecosystem Respiration (ER). The station is part of the Australian Mountain Research Facility, located at 1616 meters elevation in Alpine vegetation.
ARCOS, a network operated by the Dauphin Island Sea Lab, has collected continuous real-time data from fixed stations across coastal Alabama since 2003. Stations are strategically placed to sample across salinity gradients, from delta to offshore, measuring parameters like air temperature, wind speed, water temperature, salinity, and dissolved oxygen. This long-term, multi-parameter dataset supports environmental monitoring and resource management for the Gulf of Mexico region.