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Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
27,379 datasets
A single 2D seismic profile from the offshore Canning Basin, Western Australia, interpreted as a possible complex impact crater. The symmetrical Haines Structure spans approximately 2.5 km and exhibits seismic characteristics like a central uplift and sagging overlying horizon. Geoscience Australia published this interpretation as an external scientific journal paper.
Late 1800s to 2100 (or 2200) monthly outputs from 10 IPCC climate models. The dataset comprises ocean model outputs for the Indonesian Throughflow and Leeuwin Current region in the East Indian Ocean. Models have horizontal resolutions from approximately 1 to 2.5 degrees and include 3-dimensional fields of current velocity and wind.
Weather forecasting data for the United Kingdom, United States, and Canada. The dataset likely contains predictions for a 5-day period from July 12 to 16, 2026. It was sourced from Kaggle, but the original author, specific collection method, and data volume are unknown.
These data contain ocean temperature-depth profiles collected using expendable bathythermograph (XBT) instruments from the vessel WEATHERBIRD II. The dataset covers a period from April 1985 to July 1987 in the North Atlantic Ocean. Data were processed and archived by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) in its standard C116 format.
Temperature-depth profiles were collected using expendable bathythermograph (XBT) instruments from NOAA Ship Fairweather. The dataset covers a specific cruise in the Gulf of Alaska and North Pacific Ocean during the summer of 1986. Data were processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center to its standard C116 format for historical ocean profile records.
A 2018 lecture describes a technical capacity-building program between Australian and Indonesian scientists following the 2004 Sumatra earthquake. The collaboration aimed to produce a modern seismic hazard map for Indonesia and establish a foundation for sustainable earthquake risk reduction. The talk was presented by Prof. Phil R. Cummins as part of the Distinguished Geoscience Australia Lecturer series.
Southwest Western Australia's wave-dominated estuaries are the focus of this dataset, which examines surface sediment and water column nutrient concentrations. The data covers 12 estuaries with average depths under 4 meters and calculated sediment loads ranging from 0.2 to 10.8 kg m-2 year-1. It was published by Geoscience Australia Data and last updated in March 2026.
Wave spectra and meteorological data were collected from NOAA Ship FERREL over a two-month period in 1982. The dataset is structured in the NODC F191 format, which includes seven record types for buoy identification, meteorological parameters, and wave time series. Data in this accession are noted to not completely conform to the standard F191 format.
ROFS provides 48-hour forecasts of ocean conditions using the Princeton Ocean Model, a three-dimensional hydrodynamic circulation model. The dataset covers a decade from 1997 to 2007 for the U.S. East Coast region from approximately 30°N to 47°N. This collaborative model was developed by NOAA's National Weather Service and National Ocean Service, Princeton University, and the Naval Oceanographic Office.
Global sea surface temperature data derived from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer on the Metop-A satellite, launched 19 Oct 2006. The European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT) Ocean and Sea Ice Satellite Application Facility produces this dataset in near real time. It is a Level 3 Collated product remapped onto a 0.05 degree grid twice daily, compliant with the GHRSST Data Specification version 2.
A global sea surface temperature dataset derived from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer on the Metop-B satellite, launched 17 Sep 2012. The European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT) Ocean and Sea Ice Satellite Application Facility (OSI SAF) produces this product in near real time, with data remapped onto a 0.05-degree grid twice daily. The product format complies with the GHRSST Data Specification version 2.
Four distinct glacial facies and two sediment drift facies provide a record of ice sheet advance and retreat in the George V Basin. Radiocarbon ages from sediment cores link the fluted sediment drift deposit to the Last Glacial Maximum. This dataset, published by Geoscience Australia Data, reconstructs late Quaternary ice dynamics using integrated Chirp sub-bottom profiles, multi-channel seismic data, and core samples.
Observations from NOAA's Real-time Coastal Observation Network (ReCON) moored buoys in the Great Lakes have been collected during open water seasons since 2004. The dataset includes parameters such as air and water temperature, chlorophyll, dissolved oxygen, wind speed and direction, wave height, and current profiles. Data undergoes automated quality assurance via QARTOD tests, and invalid records are removed.
From July 22, 1985, to September 9, 1987, this dataset contains time-series measurements of ocean currents and other environmental parameters from the Endicott Development Project monitoring program. Data were collected from fixed platforms, drifters, and CTD stations in the Beaufort Sea by the US Army Corps of Engineers and processed to the NODC F015 standard format. The core data include east-west and north-south current vector components, typically at 10-15 minute intervals, and may also report water temperature, pressure, and salinity.
The 6th Chinese National Arctic Research Expedition (CHINARE2014) collected underway surface and atmospheric CO2 data from July 27 to September 9, 2014. Measurements include fugacity of CO2 in seawater and atmosphere, sea surface temperature, salinity, atmospheric pressure, and the delta between them. The data was processed using the pCO2 Sys v126 MATLAB program following established scientific procedures.
Seven Aanderaa current meter moorings (AC831-AC837) collected high-frequency oceanographic data in and around the Astoria Canyon off the Pacific Northwest coast. The dataset contains filtered and quality-controlled measurements of current speed, direction, and water temperature, sampled at 15-minute intervals. It was created by researchers at the University of Washington and is cited in multiple peer-reviewed studies on coastal circulation and canyon dynamics.
Physical oceanography data from the LATEX-B study, a major federal initiative to understand circulation and reduce risks for offshore oil and gas operations. The dataset represents the final submission from Louisiana State University, comprising 98 files totaling 1.93 gigabytes of measurements. It was collected in the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, and other waters as part of the largest physical oceanography program in the Gulf, which began in September 1991.
Current meter data were collected from moored instruments in the Southwest Pacific Ocean as part of the Equatorial Pacific Ocean Climate Studies (EPOCS) project. The dataset contains time series measurements of east-west (u) and north-south (v) current vector components, typically at 10-15 minute intervals, and may include water temperature, pressure, and salinity. Data were submitted by NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory and processed to the NODC standard F015 format.
The submarine Kenn Plateau covers approximately 140,000 km² east of central Queensland. This geological dataset details its evolution from a continental fragment, including Cretaceous to Neogene tectonic events, sediment deposition, and volcanic activity.
8500124 contains wave spectra and meteorological data collected from NOAA Ship FERREL and other platforms in the Chesapeake Bay from March 14 to November 22, 1983. The data has been processed to the NODC F191 format, which includes seven record types for buoy identification, meteorological parameters, and wave time-series details. Each record is 120 characters long, sorted by station and record type.