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News corpora, social media analysis, movie/music metadata, sports data, cultural datasets, misinformation
10,446 datasets
New York State records for environmental permits administered by the Department of Environmental Conservation, beginning in 1988. The dataset tracks application details, status, and regulatory decisions via the DART web interface. It is published by data.ny.gov and was last updated in April 2026.
NCEI Accession 0157224 contains surface underway measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure, salinity, and sea surface temperature collected aboard the vessel Celebrity Equinox. Data collection spanned from February 23, 2015, to January 2, 2016, across multiple seas including the North Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and the Mediterranean Sea. The dataset likely contains time-series records of atmospheric and oceanic carbon dioxide levels, barometric pressure, and related physical variables.
Surface underway measurements from the NOAA Ship Miller Freeman cover the Bering Sea, Gulf of Alaska, and multiple U.S. West Coast National Marine Sanctuaries from May 2009 to October 2010. The dataset includes partial pressure of carbon dioxide in air and water, salinity, sea surface temperature, and barometric pressure, collected using CO2 gas analyzers and equilibrators. It is part of the Global Coastal Carbon Data Project, focusing on carbon cycle dynamics in continental margin regions.
NCEI Accession 0157293 contains surface underway data collected from the R/V EXPLORER OF THE SEAS across the North Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and other coastal regions from March 29, 2014, to January 4, 2015. The dataset includes measurements of the partial pressure of carbon dioxide in air and water, salinity, sea surface temperature, and barometric pressure, collected using a Carbon dioxide (CO2) gas analyzer. These data were collected by Rik Wanninkhof of NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory as part of the Volunteer Observing Ship (VOS) program.
From 2009-01-09 to 2010-03-21, this dataset contains chemical, meteorological, and physical data collected from the R/V CAPE HATTERAS in the Gulf of Mexico. It includes measurements of barometric pressure, air and seawater carbon dioxide partial pressure, salinity, and sea surface temperature, collected using a CO2 gas analyzer and equilibrator. The data are part of the Global Coastal Carbon Data Project, focusing on carbon cycle dynamics in coastal regions.
From 2010 to 2015, this dataset contains surface underway measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure and related variables collected aboard the NOAA Ship GORDON GUNTER. It likely contains time-series data for air-sea CO2 difference, barometric pressure, salinity, and sea surface temperature across multiple coastal regions. The data are part of the Global Coastal Carbon Data Project, focusing on carbon cycle dynamics in continental margins.
South Pacific and Southern Ocean surface underway data collected aboard the R/V Roger Revelle from January 6 to February 19, 2005. The dataset includes measurements of the partial pressure or fugacity of carbon dioxide in air and water, sea surface temperature, salinity, and barometric pressure. It was collected by NOAA PMEL scientists as part of the international CLIVAR repeat hydrography program to quantify changes in ocean carbon storage and transport.
NCEI Accession 0157271 contains surface underway data collected from the vessel Trans Future 5 across the western Pacific Ocean and adjacent seas from December 18, 2012, to January 2, 2014. The dataset includes measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure in air and water, sea surface temperature, salinity, wind speed, and other meteorological variables. Data were collected by Yukihiro Nojiri of the National Institute for Environmental Studies using instruments like carbon dioxide gas analyzers, thermosalinographs, and barometric pressure sensors.
From August to October 2003, this dataset contains surface underway measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure, salinity, temperature, and wind collected aboard the R/V Mirai in the Coral Sea, South Pacific Ocean, and Tasman Sea. It was collected by Akihiko Murata of JAMSTEC as part of the CLIVAR P06/BEAGLE 2003 program to quantify changes in ocean carbon storage and transport. The data likely includes time-series records from a carbon dioxide gas analyzer and a shower head chamber equilibrator.
From January 2, 2016, to January 2, 2017, this dataset contains surface underway measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure and related variables collected aboard the vessel Celebrity Equinox. The data cover multiple seas and basins in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea, including the Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and Strait of Gibraltar. Measurements include air-sea difference in carbon dioxide partial pressure, barometric pressure, salinity, and sea surface temperature, collected using a CO2 gas analyzer.
From March 2011 to August 2012, this dataset contains surface underway measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure in the atmosphere and water, alongside sea surface temperature and salinity, collected aboard the NOAA Ship Henry B. Bigelow along the US East Coast. It is part of the Global Coastal Carbon Data Project, focusing on carbon cycle dynamics in coastal continental margins. The data were collected using CO2 gas analyzers and equilibrators by researchers from NOAA's Northeast Fisheries Science Center and Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory.
Coastal waters of Washington and Oregon contain high-resolution oceanographic profiles from the R/V WECOMA cruise between June 19 and August 5, 1988. The data, processed to the NODC F022 standard, likely contains nearly continuous vertical measurements of temperature, salinity, and density, with possible dissolved oxygen or transmissivity readings. Each station includes cruise metadata, position, date, time, and may include concurrent meteorological and sea surface conditions.
Southern Ocean, South Pacific Ocean, Indian Ocean, and Tasman Sea surface underway data from the R/V Aurora Australis includes measurements of air-sea carbon dioxide partial pressure difference, barometric pressure, sea surface temperature, salinity, and wind. The data were collected by researchers from the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) using barometric pressure sensors and CO2 gas analyzers. It spans multiple voyages from 2006 to 2016, with the most detailed records covering 2014-2016.
Surface underway data from the MN COLIBRI vessel includes measurements of atmospheric and aquatic carbon dioxide partial pressure, salinity, sea surface temperature, and barometric pressure. The data were collected across the North Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea, including the Alboran Sea and Strait of Gibraltar, from March 30, 2010, to January 2, 2011. Instruments used include a carbon dioxide gas analyzer, thermosalinographs, and a barometric pressure sensor.
NCEI Accession 0144980 contains surface underway data collected from NOAA Ship OSCAR DYSON during a 2014 cruise in the Bering Sea, Gulf of Alaska, and North Pacific Ocean. The dataset includes measurements of the partial pressure of carbon dioxide in air and water, salinity, sea surface temperature, and barometric pressure, collected using specialized instruments like CO2 gas analyzers and thermosalinographs. These data are part of the Global Coastal Carbon Data Project, which focuses on carbon cycle dynamics on continental margins.
Bay of Fundy, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, North Atlantic Ocean, and Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary are the regions covered by this dataset of underway surface observations from the R/V Explorer of the Seas. It contains measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure, salinity, sea surface temperature, dissolved oxygen, fluorescence, and meteorological variables collected during 47 cruises from December 2006 to December 2007. The data were collected using specialized instruments including a CO2 gas analyzer and thermosalinographs as part of the NOAA VOS (Voluntary Observing Ship) program.
Surface underway measurements from the vessel New Century 2 span the Bering Sea, Caribbean Sea, Coastal Waters of Florida, Southeast Alaska and British Columbia, Columbia River estuary, Gulf of the Farallones, Monterey Bay, Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuaries, and the North Atlantic, North Pacific, and Philippine Seas from April 11, 2014, to January 12, 2015. The data include the partial pressure (or fugacity) of carbon dioxide in air and water, the air-sea difference of this variable, salinity, and sea surface temperature, collected using a Carbon dioxide (CO2) gas analyzer. These observations were collected by Shin-ichiro Nakaoka of the National Institute for Environmental Studies as part of the Volunteer Observing Ship (VOS) program across 14 distinct cruise legs.
A mini-review by Chiara De Livio, examining articles from the last decade that use articulatory suppression to disrupt phonological access. The 2.8 MB document, last updated in March 2026, provides an overview of protocols, emphasizing the heterogeneity of methodological choices in verbal interference tasks. It discusses implications for embodied cognition and stresses the need for evidence on the neurocognitive effects of different suppression modalities.
A mini-review document examining articles from the last decade that use articulatory suppression to disrupt phonological access during primary tasks. The 2.8 MB document, authored by Chiara De Livio, provides an overview of protocols, emphasizing the heterogeneity of methodological choices in verbal stimuli, articulation modalities, rhythms, and presentation modes. It was last updated on March 18, 2026, and is licensed under CC-BY-4.0.
From January 8 to October 6, 2012, the research vessel Polarstern collected surface underway measurements across multiple ocean basins. The dataset includes partial pressure of carbon dioxide in air and water, salinity, sea surface temperature, barometric pressure, wind speed, and wind direction. Data were gathered by scientists from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Groningen University, and the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research.