Salford Air Quality Monitoring Stations with Over 10 Years of Pollutant Data
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Description
Automatic air quality stations in Salford, UK, measure pollutants including nitrogen dioxide, PM10, PM2.5, and ozone. The network, operated by Salford City Council and DEFRA, has collected data for over 10 years at locations such as Eccles, M60, and Glazebury. Data is published by the Government Digital Service and available via Defra, GreatAirManchester, and Air Quality England.
Use Cases
Analyze long-term trends of nitrogen dioxide and particulate matter based on the over 10 years of data mentioned.
Compare pollution levels between urban (Eccles, M60) and rural (Glazebury) monitoring sites described in the network.
Model the impact of local policies on air quality based on continuous measurements from the Greater Manchester Air Quality Network.
Validate regional air quality forecasts using historical data from the DEFRA Automatic Urban and Rural Network stations.
Strengths
Over 10 years of historical data provides a substantial temporal series for trend analysis.
Covers multiple key pollutants (nitrogen dioxide, PM10, PM2.5, ozone) as stated in the description.
Data is integrated into national (DEFRA AURN) and regional (Greater Manchester Air Quality Network) monitoring frameworks.
Limitations
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment for large-scale modeling.
Last update date is unknown; freshness unverified.
Provenance
Source
Salford City Council and the UK Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA).
Collection Method
Continuous analyses from automatic monitoring stations.
Time Range
Over 10 years (specific start and end dates unknown).
Freshness
null
Geography
Salford, Greater Manchester, UK, specifically Eccles, M60, and Glazebury stations.
Use of this data requires acceptance of the Public Sector End User Licence - INSPIRE. Data is reportedly available in Excel-compatible formats, but specific file formats are not detailed.