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News corpora, social media analysis, movie/music metadata, sports data, cultural datasets, misinformation
11,291 datasets
6920 pixels by 5760 lines compose each full Landsat 5 Thematic Mapper scene in this archive. The dataset contains orthorectified Level-1T imagery acquired by the European Space Agency from ground stations in Fucino, Matera, Kiruna, Maspalomas, and campaign sites. This specific collection was last updated in November 2011.
From June to December 2011, surface underway measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure, salinity, and sea temperature were collected from the WAKATAKA MARU across the North Atlantic, North Pacific, and South Atlantic Oceans. The data were collected by researchers from the National Research Institute of Fisheries Science and Tohoku Regional Fisheries Research Laboratory using carbon dioxide gas analyzers and equilibrators. This dataset is associated with the VOS_Wakataka_Maru_2011 and VOS_Wakataka_Maru_WK1112 research cruises.
O-Buoy5 collected daily, hourly, or continuous measurements over Arctic Ocean sea ice, including ozone, carbon dioxide, bromine monoxide, wind, temperature, humidity, pressure, location, and horizon pictures. The dataset was produced by the organization SCIOPS and last updated in January 2012. Carbon dioxide data is noted as level 1 and unfiltered, while other data are final.
Partial pressure of carbon dioxide and related variables were collected from the AURORA AUSTRALIS research vessel across the Indian Ocean, South Pacific Ocean, and Tasman Sea during 2011. The data include sea surface temperature, salinity, wind speed, and barometric pressure, gathered using carbon dioxide gas analyzers and thermosalinographs. Bronte Tilbrook of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization collected this data as part of the VOS_Aurora_Australis_AA_2011 voyages.
Antarctic ice sheet data from the WAIS-D borehole contains vertically-propagating compression-wave speed measurements. The dataset includes individual wave-speed measurements, 3-meter running averages for each log, and a combined interpretation profile. It was last updated by AMD_USAPDC on 2012-01-03.
The R/V Laurence M. Gould LMG1111 dataset contains underway data collected during a research cruise for the U.S. Antarctic Program. The NSF-supported icebreaker conducted global change studies in biological, chemical, physical, and oceanographic disciplines. This leg started and ended in Punta Arenas, Chile, and the data was last updated in December 2011.
Full-depth CTD profiles were collected along and across McMurdo Sound from November 26 to December 3, 2011. The data includes measurements from eleven stations across six independent sites, capturing vertical profiles of temperature, salinity, and hydrostatic pressure. The dataset was submitted by NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information.
Canadian Arctic Archipelago surface underway data collected aboard the CCGS Amundsen from July to October 2011. The dataset includes partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2), barometric pressure, sea surface salinity, and sea surface temperature. Data were collected using a CO2 gas analyzer and shower head chamber equilibrator for autonomous CO2 measurement.
From June 27 to August 31, 2011, this dataset contains underway surface observations of carbon dioxide partial pressure, salinity, temperature, and barometric pressure collected from the NOAA Ship Bell M. Shimada in the U.S. West Coast California Current System. The data were collected by researchers from the NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory using instruments including a carbon dioxide gas analyzer and thermosalinographs.
NOAA's West Coast Ocean Acidification Cruise (WCOA2011) collected surface underway measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure (pCO2) and other variables. The cruise took place from August 12 to 30, 2011, aboard the R/V Wecoma, occupying 95 stations from northern Washington to southern California. This effort was conducted in support of the NOAA Ocean Acidification Program's coastal monitoring and research objectives.
The Bass Strait, Coral Sea, Inland Sea, North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, Solomon Sea, South Pacific Ocean, and Tasman Sea are covered by this collection of chemical, meteorological, and physical data. It contains measurements of partial pressure of carbon dioxide, salinity, air temperature, barometric pressure, and wind speed, among other variables. These data were collected by Yukihiro Nojiri of the National Institute for Environmental Studies from the vessel Trans Future 5 between June 2006 and August 2011.
Surface underway data collected from the SOYO-MARU research vessel in the Japan Sea, North Pacific Ocean, and Philippine Sea between November 2010 and July 2011. The dataset includes measurements of the partial pressure of carbon dioxide in water, salinity, sea surface temperature, and barometric pressure. Tsuneo Ono and Tadafumi Ichikawa of the National Research Institute of Fisheries Science collected these data using a Carbon dioxide (CO2) gas analyzer and other instruments.
O-Buoy2 collected daily, hourly, or continuous measurements over Arctic Ocean sea ice. The dataset includes O3, CO2, BrO, wind speed and direction, air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, latitude, longitude, UTC time, horizon pictures, heading, pitch, and roll. Final data was produced by the organization SCIOPS, with a last update recorded in July 2011.
Temperature, conductivity, and pressure measurements were collected from two moorings deployed off the coast of Barrow, Alaska. The dataset contains one year of observations from August 2009 to August 2010. The data was collected by researchers including H. Eicken and R. Gradinger and published by UCAR/NCAR – CISL – ACADIS.
East China Sea, North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, and South Pacific Ocean surface observations collected from the KEIFU MARU vessel between 2001-01-20 and 2011-03-22. The data include barometric pressure, carbon dioxide levels in air, partial pressure of carbon dioxide, salinity, and sea surface temperature. Akira Nakadate and Shu Saito of the Japan Meteorological Agency collected these data as part of the VOS R/V Keifu Maru Lines data set.
From December 7, 2010, to March 18, 2011, this dataset contains time series of temperature and pressure from four logging stations deployed at the seafloor near the Polish Polar Station Arctowski on King George Island, Antarctica. The data was collected by NOAA NCEI to quantify summer temperature variability across three transects in the intertidal zone, from extreme low to extreme high water spring tide levels.
Two rock samples were collected at Cape Denison, Antarctica, during the 2010-2011 Mawson's Huts Foundation Expedition by Dr. David Tingay. The samples consist of Cape Denison Orthogneiss and Cape Denison Amphibolite, which are approved Geoscience Australia lithological names. Results were published in AusGeo News in December 2011 and are discussed in a related geological map.
Surface underway observations of atmospheric and oceanic carbon dioxide partial pressure, salinity, and temperature collected from the Hakuho Maru research vessel. The data were gathered in the Indian Ocean and Southern Oceans south of 60 degrees South by the Meteorological Research Institute between December 17, 2010, and January 17, 2011. Instruments included a barometric pressure sensor and a carbon dioxide gas analyzer.
Moored temperature, salinity, and velocity records from two oceanographic moorings recovered off Cape Adare in the Antarctic Ocean. The data set covers the deepest 500 meters of the water column on the continental slope at depths of approximately 1700 and 1900 meters. The preliminary records were collected by SCIOPS and span the period from February 2007 to January 2011.
From March 2010 to January 2011, surface underway data were collected aboard the vessel BARCELONA EXPRESS across multiple seas, including the Alboran Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and North Atlantic Ocean. The dataset includes measurements of partial pressure of carbon dioxide in air and water, salinity, sea surface temperature, and barometric pressure. It was collected by researchers from NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory using a carbon dioxide gas analyzer.