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Electricity generation/consumption, renewable energy, smart grid, oil/gas, carbon emissions
4,433 datasets
2012 release from the Africa Soil Information Service (AfSIS) provides continent-wide raster data on surface albedo. It contains time series averages, standard deviations, and variances for white sky and black sky albedo, derived from NASA's MODIS MCD43A3 product. The data has a 500-meter spatial resolution and a 16-day temporal resolution.
Leaf Area Index and Fraction of Photosynthetically Active Radiation rasters provide continent-wide data for Africa. Calculations include time series average, standard deviation, and variance derived from NASA MODIS MCD43A3 observations. The Africa Soil Information Service (AfSIS) released this collection in 2012, with annual updates using data from the USGS LPDAAC.
In 2012, physical and chemical properties of soil were collected in Cambridge Bay, Canada, before climate manipulation experiments. Soils were sampled from two depths: 0-5 cm and 5-10 cm. The data was analyzed by AMD_KOPRI to monitor changes induced by increased temperature and precipitation.
Council, Alaska soil physical and chemical properties were analyzed from nine core samples collected in 2014. The dataset likely contains measurements of soil properties intended to investigate relationships with microbial community structure. The data was provided by AMD_KOPRI and last updated in NASA's Earthdata system on July 2, 2012.
Three sampling points in Council, Alaska provide soil physical and chemical properties analyzed in 2012. The data was collected by AMD_KOPRI to investigate relationships with microbial community structure. It originates from Geophysical research conducted in 2011.
AMD_KOPRI collected soil samples near Cambridge Bay, Canada in 2012. The dataset is a microbial diversity survey in permafrost soil ecosystems. The data was last updated on July 10, 2012.
A network of approximately 200 sites provides standardized observations of seasonal thawing and freezing in high-latitude soils. The data archive contains all measurements submitted prior to June 5, 2012, coordinated by the SCIOPS organization. It represents a long-term program designed to detect decadal changes in permafrost dynamics.
Field research data examines the impact of changing winter seasons on ice road transportation systems in Canada's Northwest Territories. The study was conducted by SCIOPS researchers through site visits to Yellowknife, Dettah, and Wha-Ti in 2010, involving surveys, road operation discussions, and analysis of climate and socio-economic archives. It includes preliminary economic impact estimates and a weather/snow/ice model based on historical data.
Sixteen soil samples were collected near the Casey EPH fuel tank supply line leak in Antarctica for Total Petroleum Hydrocarbon analysis. The AU_AADC organization documented sample locations, depths, collection dates, and collector names. Samples were taken on February 13 and March 20, 2012.
NASA EarthData hosts a dataset containing soil temperature measurements within the surface layer (0 to 50 cm depth). The dataset was last updated on April 24, 2012. The organization SCIOPS is associated with this data.
Antarctic soil and plant debris samples from the King Sejong Station area yielded 53 isolated cold-adapted bacterial strains with the ability to degrade or bioconvert humic substances. The isolates were identified via 16S rRNA gene analysis, revealing a simple bacterial diversity. The data was collected and published by AMD_KOPRI in 2012.
2011-2012 soil samples collected from Barton Peninsula for a microbial diversity survey. The dataset likely contains measurements of microbial populations and environmental variables from Antarctic soil ecosystems. It was contributed by AMD_KOPRI and last updated on February 6, 2012.
Soil samples collected near Terra Nova Bay in Antarctica during 2012. The dataset likely contains results from a microbial diversity survey of soil ecosystems. It was contributed by AMD_KOPRI and last updated on January 23, 2012.
NOAA_NCEI's Scribe Database Collection contains 14 harmonized databases compiled during the Deepwater Horizon oil spill response from April 2010 to November 2011. The data includes locations, descriptions, and analysis of environmental samples like water, sediment, oil, and air, contributed by federal and state agencies and BP contractors. This collection represents a cleaned and standardized second phase of data intended for reliable evaluation and reporting to the Unified Area Command.
2011-09-20 to 2011-09-27 measurements of water column properties from NOAA Ship Pisces. The dataset contains processed Conductivity, Temperature, and Depth (CTD) casts, along with dissolved oxygen and fluorometry, collected for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill sampling effort. Data was processed and quality-checked by NOAA NCEI, with final products delivered as NetCDF files.
Southeastern Gulf of Mexico and Florida coast data documents macroinfauna populations and sediment grain size from sandy beach swash zones. The dataset contains mean counts per core for dominant species Donax variabilis and Emerita talpoida, along with sediment measurements. It was collected by NOAA NCEI from May 2010 to July 2011 in response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
Measurements of fine root projected area were made during the 2010 and 2011 growing seasons in plots of a factorial warming and accelerated snowmelt field experiment. Data are separated into roots of Eriophorum vaginatum and all other species combined, collected by SCIOPS using minirhizotron imaging.
Council, Alaska soil samples collected in 2011 to investigate bacterial community structure. Seventy samples were taken at 25-meter intervals from two depth ranges (0–10 cm and 10–20 cm). Bacterial 16S pyrosequencing was performed by AMD_KOPRI.
Council, Alaska surface soils from 36 points were collected in 2011. Sampling depths were 0-10 and 10-20 centimeters. Physical and chemical properties of the soil were analyzed by AMD_KOPRI.
143 cold-adapted bacterial strains were isolated from Alaska tundra soil samples for their ability to degrade humic substances. The isolates were identified via 16S rRNA gene analysis, revealing a simple bacterial diversity structure. This dataset was produced by the AMD_KOPRI organization and last updated in August 2011.