International Polar Year 1882-1883 the digitized meteorological data legacy


Autoria(s): Krause, Reinhard A; Grobe, Hannes; Sieger, Rainer
Data(s)

13/09/2010

Resumo

The first International Polar Year (IPY) was an international effort to perform continous meteorological and geophysical observations over a time period of two years (1882-1883). Eleven nations established twelve research stations in the Arctic along with thirteen auxilary stations. Two stations were operated on the southern hemisphere (South Georgia and Tierra del Fuego). The data were published in 26 volumes on 8700+ pages of reports, descriptions, tables and graphs in total. The list of meteorological parameters includes temperature, wind, pressure, clouds, precipitation, evaporation, humidity and radiation. In the light of Global Change and the intensification of observations and continous measurements in both polar regions, long-time series increase in importance. The observations of the first IPY from the 19th century enable us to extend the data from the 20th century even more back into the past. In the occasion of the fourth IPY (2007-2009) WDC-MARE decided to digitize the complete set of meteorological data in full hourly resolution and publish it in its reports and make it available in Open Access via the data library PANGAEA.

Formato

application/octet-stream, 674.0 MBytes

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.761657

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.761657

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Relação

Krause, Reinhard A; Grobe, Hannes; Sieger, Rainer (2010): International Polar Year 1882-1883 - the digitized meteorological data legacy. WDC-MARE Reports, 8, CD+booklet, 25 pp, doi:10.2312/wdc-mare.2010.8

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

World Data Center for Marine Environmental Sciences

Tipo

Dataset