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Offline RL trajectories, game data, robot demonstrations, RLHF, multi-agent interaction
10,087 datasets
Lava samples from seamounts in the Cape Adare region of the western Ross Sea were collected during a 2007 cruise. The one-year investigation, supported by an NSF award, aimed to determine seamount ages and characterize mantle sources. Data was contributed by the organization AMD_USAPDC and last updated in September 2008.
Oceanographic profiles contain temperature, salinity, and meteorology measurements from the Tropical Indian Ocean. Data was collected by the Research Moored Array for African-Asian-Australian Monsoon Analysis and Prediction (RAMA) array. The dataset covers observations from July 1993 to September 2008 and is provided by NOAA NCEI.
A Small Grants for Exploratory Research (SGER) project from 2008 conducted experimental incubations aboard the icebreaker Oden in the Amundsen and Ross Seas. The research investigated the effects of altered pCO2, pH, iron, and vitamin B12 on Antarctic phytoplankton communities, carbon cycling, and nutrient biogeochemistry. The work was organized by AMD_USAPDC and aimed to build international collaborations with the Swedish marine science community.
Trace metal measurements from the Amundsen and Ross Seas collected aboard the icebreaker Oden. The dataset likely contains distributions of dissolved and particulate metals and cellular metal stoichiometry data. Data was contributed by AMD_USAPDC and last updated in August 2008.
2008 data collected by the NSF-supported R/V Laurence M. Gould icebreaker during leg LMG0811. The dataset consists of underway measurements from a round-trip voyage between Punta Arenas, Chile, and Palmer Station, supporting global change studies in biological, chemical, physical, and oceanographic disciplines. The data is provided by SCIOPS.
2008 imagery includes true color (RGB) and infrared (IR) orthorectified mosaic tiles of Kachemak Bay, Alaska. The dataset was collected by the NOAA Remote Sensing Division using an Applanix Digital Sensor System from a nominal altitude of 5,000 feet. It was produced for NOAA's Integrated Ocean and Coastal Mapping (IOCM) program to support research on airborne digital imagery standards.
The Gulf of Alaska is the geographic scope for this dataset. It likely contains profiles of sound velocity, temperature, and salinity collected from underway vessel profilers and CTD casts. The data was collected by NOAA Ship Fairweather for project PWS OPR-P132-FA-08 between September 6 and October 3, 2008.
CTD and bottle data were collected from the R/V HERMANO GINES on the continental shelf of Venezuela from 10 April 2007 to 05 August 2008. The University of South Florida gathered the data in support of the Carbon Retention in a Colored Ocean (CARIACO) project. The dataset includes CTD parameters like temperature, salinity, and depth, alongside bottle measurements for nutrients, dissolved oxygen, and particulate organic matter.
R/V Nathaniel B. Palmer, an NSF-supported research icebreaker, collected this underway data during leg NBP0808 in support of the U.S. Antarctic Program. The dataset likely contains biological, chemical, physical, and oceanographic measurements from the ship's continuous sensors. DataSalon sourced this record from NASA Earthdata, last updated in August 2008.
0.5-meter ground sample distance pixels provide high-resolution true color and infrared imagery of coastal New Hampshire. The NOAA Remote Sensing Division acquired the data from an Applanix Digital Sensor System flown at 5,000 feet AGL in 2008. Images have been orthorectified and mosaiced to create a seamless product.
R/V Laurence M. Gould, a U.S. National Science Foundation-supported icebreaker, collected this underway data during leg LMG0808 in support of the U.S. Antarctic Program. The leg started and ended in Punta Arenas, Chile, and the data supports global change studies in biological, chemical, physical, and oceanographic disciplines. The dataset was last updated on July 8, 2008.
October 1996 through May 2008 data from the RADARSAT-1 satellite tracks sea ice motion and properties over the Arctic Ocean. The NASA MEaSUREs program produced four monthly products: ice motion, deformation, age/thickness, and radar backscatter, derived by tracking a 10km grid at 3-day intervals across winter and summer seasons.
Underway data was collected during the NBP0805 research cruise of the R/V Nathaniel B. Palmer. The leg operated in the Drake Passage, starting and ending in Punta Arenas, Chile, to study glacial radiocarbon constraints from deep-sea corals. The dataset was last updated in May 2008 and is associated with the organization SCIOPS.
0.5-meter ground sample distance provides high-resolution detail for each pixel in these true color and infrared image mosaics. NOAA's Remote Sensing Division collected the data in 2008 from an aircraft flying at 5,000 feet above ground level over the Pamlico Sound region. The product supports the Integrated Ocean and Coastal Mapping program.
WorldView-1 satellite imagery of Heard Island from March 23, 2008, purchased by the Australian Antarctic Division and the University of Tasmania. The dataset consists of two orthorectified image strips merged into a single mosaic for the entire island. This work was completed as part of ASAC project 2939.
NSF-supported research icebreaker Laurence M. Gould collected this underway data during leg LMG0804, which operated in support of the U.S. Antarctic Program. The leg started and ended at Punta Arenas, Chile, focusing on global change studies across biological, chemical, physical, and oceanographic disciplines. Data was last updated on April 23, 2008.
R/V Laurence M. Gould collected this underway data during a 2008 Antarctic research leg. The NSF-supported icebreaker conducts year-round global change studies in biological, chemical, physical, and oceanographic disciplines. This specific leg, LMG0803, traveled from Punta Arenas, Chile, and returned to the same port.
Antarctic and Southern Ocean data was collected during the LMG0802 research cruise of the R/V Laurence M. Gould, which operated in support of the U.S. Antarctic Program. The leg started and ended in Punta Arenas, Chile, and the dataset likely contains biological, chemical, physical, and oceanographic measurements. The data was last updated on March 16, -2008.
R/V Nathaniel B. Palmer NBP0801 data consists of underway measurements collected during a research cruise in support of 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 at Lyttelton, New Zealand.
CTD (Conductivity, Temperature, Depth) cast data collected by the RV Melville research vessel during a 20-day intensive observation period in the Philippine Sea. The dataset was archived by NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) and contains physical oceanographic profiles from January 2008.