SeaDataNet - Physical oceanography from British Oceanographic Data Centre (PointOfContact; Data Custodian; Data Distributor), point observations

SeaDataNet is the Pan-European infrastructure for marine and ocean data management and delivery services. It is supported by the EU under its Research Infrastructures programme. It connects 40 National Oceanographic Data Centres (NODC's) and 50 other data centres from 35 countries, bordering the European seas and Atlantic Ocean. The centres are mostly part of major marine management and research organisations that are acquiring and managing a large collection of marine and ocean data from various disciplines. This includes major international organisations, ICES and IOC-IODE. The overall objective is provide overview and access to marine and oceanographic data and data-products from government and research institutes in Europe. SeaDataNet contributes to the implementation of the EU INSPIRE and Marine Strategy Framework Directives. It also plays a key role in the development and operation of the EU EMODNet initiative. The SeaDataNet infrastructure is fully operational and INSPIRE compliant. It includes a versatile SeaDataNet portal (https://www.seadatanet.org) that provides users with a range of metadata, data and data product access services as well as standards, tools and guides for good marine data management. The Common Data Index (CDI) data discovery and access service provides harmonised access to the large volumes of datasets that are managed by the connected data centres. The CDI service contains already references and gives access to more than 1,5 milllion marine and oceanographic datasets as managed by 90 data centres. These numbers are increasing regularly because of further data population and more connected data centres as part of SeaDataNet II, EMODnet and other EU projects. For inclusion in the SeaDataNet INSPIRE compliant CSW service, the CDI records (at granule level) have been aggregated into CDI collections by a combination of Discipline, Data Centre, and geometric type. Each CSW XML record therefore represents a large collection of individual metadata records and associated datasets. By following the specified URL to the SeaDataNet portal users can evaluate these metadata in detail and request access by downloading of interesting datasets via the shopping cart transaction system that is integrated in the SeaDataNet portal.

Identifier
Source https://data.blue-cloud.org/search-details?step=~012sdn-open%3Aurn%3ASDN%3ACDI%3ALOCAL%3A43-43-43-ds03-4
Metadata Access https://data.blue-cloud.org/api/collections/sdn-open:urn:SDN:CDI:LOCAL:43-43-43-ds03-4
Provenance
Instrument water temperature sensor; salinity sensor; CTD; fluorometers; dissolved gas sensors; transmissometers; unknown; radiometers; optical backscatter sensors; water pressure sensors; current meters; ADVs and turbulence probes; altimeters; current profilers; sea level recorders; in-situ particle sizers; bathythermographs; nutrient analysers; pH sensors; redox potential sensors; wave recorders; discrete water samplers; Expendable bathythermographs; microstructure sensors; thermistor chains; expendable CTDs; anemometers; meteorological packages; precipitation samplers; sound velocity sensors; continuous water samplers; data loggers
Publisher Blue-Cloud Data Discovery & Access service; SeaDataNet
Contributor British Oceanographic Data Centre; Marine Scotland Science; Fisheries Research Services, Aberdeen Marine Laboratory; Institute for Marine Science, University of Kiel; Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science, Lowestoft Laboratory; National Oceanography Centre (Southampton); University of Wales, School of Ocean Sciences; British Antarctic Survey; Scottish Marine Biological Association; Plymouth Marine Laboratory; Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory; Scottish Environment Protection Agency, Edinburgh Office; Scottish Office Agriculture and Fisheries Department, Aberdeen Marine Laboratory; Institute of Oceanographic Sciences, Bidston Laboratory; National Oceanography Centre (Liverpool); University of Plymouth School of Marine Science and Engineering; Scottish Association for Marine Science; Dunstaffnage Marine Laboratory; Southampton Oceanography Centre; Bangor University School of Ocean Sciences; Scottish Office Agriculture Environment and Fisheries Department, Aberdeen Marine Laboratory; Scottish Environment Protection Agency, East Kilbride Office; Institute of Oceanographic Sciences Wormley Laboratory; University of Southampton School of Ocean and Earth Science; University of East Anglia, School of Environmental Sciences; Scottish Environment Protection Agency, Angus Smith Building; Institute of Oceanographic Sciences Deacon Laboratory; University of Liverpool, Department of Oceanography; Institute of Oceanographic Sciences Taunton; Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs; Norwegian College of Fishery and Science, University of Tromsø; Department of Agriculture and Fisheries for Scotland, Aberdeen Marine Laboratory; James Rennell Centre for Ocean Circulation; University of Plymouth, Institute of Marine Studies; Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre; United Kingdom Offshore Operators Association; Defence Evaluation Research Agency; Japan Meteorological Agency; University of Southampton Department of Oceanography; Liverpool Observatory and Tidal Institute; University of Liverpool Tidal Institute and Observatory; Napier University School of Life Sciences; Norwegian Hydrographic Service; University of Liège, Laboratory of Oceanology; Institute of Coastal Oceanography and Tides; Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research; Faroese Fisheries Laboratory; Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Lowestoft Fisheries Laboratory; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science , University of Miami; Queen's University Belfast, School of Biological Sciences; Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute; University of Gothenburg, Faculty of Science; Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom; Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency, Dept. Oceanography; University of Bergen; Université Libre de Bruxelles, Laboratory of Chemical Oceanography and Water Geochemistry; Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution: Department of Physical Oceanography; University of Liverpool, Department of Earth Sciences; Vrije Universiteit Brussels, Faculty of Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Laboratory of Analytical and Environmental Chemistry; University of Cambridge Department of Earth Sciences; University of Wales Swansea Department of Geology and Oceanography; The Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences at the University of Kiel; University of Hamburg, Department of Chemistry; Environment Agency South East Regional Office; CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere; University of Bristol Geology Department; University of York, Department of Chemistry; Institute of Marine Environmental Research; Scott Polar Research Institute; Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Management Unit of North Sea and Scheldt Estuary Mathematical Models, Ostend; Danish Institute for Fisheries Research, Dept. of Marine Fisheries; New Zealand National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research, University of Otago Centre for Chemical and Physical Oceanography; IEO-CSIC, A Coruna Oceanographic Centre; United Kingdom Hydrographic Office; University of Rostock, Institute of Biosciences; Open University, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences; National Rivers Authority Northumbrian Region, Washington Laboratory; Environment Agency North West Regional Office; Hydrographic Institute, Hydrographic Surveying Vessel Task Group; Environment Agency Solent and South Downs Area Office; National Institute of Oceanography; Liverpool Observatory, Bidston; Forth River Purification Board; The Crown Estate; University of Edinburgh, Department of Geology and Geophysics; Bedford Institute of Oceanography; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, University of Bremen; ConocoPhillips Limited (Warwick); Polytechnic South West Institute of Marine Studies; University of Galway; Environment Agency Wales; University of Liverpool, Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences; Environment Agency South West Regional Office; Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Biological Institute Helgoland; Hamilton Oil Co Limited; University of Birmingham School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences; BP Plc; Imperial Chemical Industries, Brixham Lab; University of Liverpool Department of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences; Met Office, Exeter; Liverpool Observatory; North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board; Durham University, Department of Earth Sciences; The European Marine Energy Centre Limited; Clyde River Purification Board; University of St. Andrews, School of Geography and Geoscience; Irish Hydrodata Limited; Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
Publication Year 2024
OpenAccess true
Contact blue-cloud-support(at)maris.nl
Representation
Discipline Marine Science
Spatial Coverage (-176.504W, -78.145S, 179.906E, 83.324N)
Temporal Coverage Begin 1842-06-23T00:00:00Z
Temporal Coverage End 2023-02-26T00:00:00Z