The SIOS Data Management Service (SDMS) integrates information from SIOS partner data repositories into a unified virtual data centre, the SIOS Data Access Portal, allowing users to search for and access data regardless of where they are archived. Providers and users have to commit to the SIOS data policy.
The current focus is on dataset discovery through standardised metadata, and retrieval, visualisation & transformation of data. Ultimately, the Data Management Service works towards integration of datasets which requires a high level of interoperability at the data level.
SDMS currently harvests information on SIOS relevant datasets from a number of data centres (see below), some hosted by SIOS partners and some not. Data centres hosted by SIOS partners work to harmonise access to the data allowing integrated visualisation etc for the relevant datasets.
Data centres SDMS is harvesting information from.
SIOS partner data centres
Other
AWI (DE)
British Antarctic Survey
CNR (IT) - temporarily disabled due to server issues
National Snow and Ice Data Center
IGPAS (PL)
IMR (NO)
IOPAN (PL)
MET (NO) - weather stations have not been updated for a while, update in progress
NERSC (NO)
NILU (NO)
NIPR (JP)
NPI (NO)
UiS (PL)
Citation of data and service
If you use data retrieved through this portal, please acknowledge our funding source: Research Council of Norway, project number 291644, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System – Knowledge Centre, operational phase.
Always remember to cite data when used!
Citation information for individual datasets is often provided in the metadata. However, not all datasets have this information embedded in the discovery metadata. On a general basis a citation of a dataset include the same components as any other citation:
author,
title,
year of publication,
publisher (for data this is often the archive where it is housed),
edition or version,
access information (a URL or persistent identifier, e.g. DOI if provided)
SIOS recommends all partner data repositories to mint Digital Object Identifiers (DOI) on all datasets. The information required to properly cite a dataset is normally provided in the discovery metadata the datasets.
SIOS Core Data
In order to find SIOS Core Data please use the searchable item marked "Collection" on the right hand side of the map and select "SIOSCD". Quick access to SIOS Core Data is provided here.
Nansen Legacy Data
The Nansen Legacy project is using the SIOS Data Management system as the data portal. Quick access to all Nansen Legacy related datasets is available here.
Brief user guide
The Data Access Portal has information in 3 columns. An outline of the content in these columns is provided above. When first entering the search interface, all potential datasets are listed. Datasets are indicated in the map and results tabulation elements which are located in the middle column. The order of results can be modified using the "Sort by" option in the left column. On top of this column is normally relevant guidance information to user presented as collapsible elements.
If the user want to refine the search, this can be done by constraining the bounding box search. This is done in the map - the listing of datasets is automatically updated. Date constraints can be added in the left column. For these to take effect, the user has to push the button marked search. In the left column it is also possible to specific text elements to search for in the datasets. Again pushing the button marked "Search" is necessary for these to take action. Complex search patterns can be constructed using logical operators from the drop down above the text field and prefixing words with '+' to require their presence and '-' to require their non presence.
Other elements indicated in the left and right columns are facet searches, i.e. these are keywords that are found in the datasets and all datasets that contain these specific keywords in the appropriate metadata elements are listed together. Further refinement can be done using full text, date or bounding box constraints. Individuals, organisations and data centres involved in generating or curating the datasets are listed in the facets in the right column.
On Svalbard, the long-lasting snow cover and the timing of the snowmelt is a crucial factor in the yearly cycle of all land ecosystems. To monitor the timing and patterns of snow melt, automatic camera systems have been set up at three locations overlooking key research areas near Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard. All images are provided in daily resolution, and the date coded in the filename as yyyy-MM-dd. This work was funded by SMACS (project no. 236768 / E10; Svalbard Science Forum, Research Council of Norway). ** For all details see the full metadata description at "https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.846617"!
Institutions: The University Centre in Svalbard, The University Centre in Svalbard, The University Centre in Svalbard, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
A set of auroral all-sky images captured over Svalbard in 2019-2020. Images contain auroral emission and have been automatically classified for auroral morphology. Morphological classes are included.
This collection contains a high-resolution (2.5 km) dataset of glacier mass balance, runoff and snow conditions in Svalbard from 1991-2022, one of the fastest warming regions in the Arctic. The dataset is created using a full energy balance model (the CryoGrid community model) forced by both the Copernicus Arctic Regional ReAnalysis (CARRA) dataset (1991-2021) and AROME-ARCTIC forecasts (2016-2022). Each variable is available at both a daily and monthly resolution.
This collection contains a high-resolution (2.5 km) dataset of glacier mass balance and runoff in Franz Josef Land and Novaya Zemlya from 1991-2022, situated in one of the fastest warming regions in the Arctic. The dataset is created using a full energy balance model (the CryoGrid community model) forced by the Copernicus Arctic Regional ReAnalysis (CARRA) dataset (1991-2022). Each variable is available at both a daily and monthly resolution.
Satellittbildemosaikk for Svalbard, av Copernicus Sentinel data fra 2020, offline-versjon for GIS i JPG2000-filformatet. / Satellite imagery mosaic for Svalbard, using Copernicus Sentinel data of 2020, offline version for GIS in JPG2000 file format.
Dette produktet er tilgjengelig som en WMTS-karttjeneste, NP_Satellitt_Svalbard_WMTS_25833, og som et kartlag i bl.a. TopoSvalbard. / This product is available online as a WMTS service, NP_Satellitt_Svalbard_Raster_25833, and as a map layer in e.g. TopoSvalbard.
The Nansen Legacy (Arven etter Nansen), The Nansen Legacy
Last metadata update: 2023-02-06T15:15:09Z
Show more...
Abstract:
The Nansen Legacy cruise Q1 was part of the seasonal investigation of the northern Barents Sea and adjacent Arctic Basin. The cruise was conducted in 2-24 March 2021 onboard R/V Kronprins Haakon, and focused on studying the physical, chemical and biological conditions along the Nansen Legacy main transect in open waters and within the sea ice. While in sea ice we conducted ten regional scale sea ice helicopter-borne surveys of ice conditions along the Nansen Legacy transect using a helicopter-borne electromagnetic instrument (HEM) EM-bird. This dataset presents processed EM-bird data on total snow and sea-ice thickness along the flight tracks.
This is a contribution to the Research Council of Norway project “Nansen Legacy” (https://arvenetternansen.com/), WP RF-1 “Physical drivers”.
Quality
See the attached docuement “AeN_Q1_202103_HEM_icethickness_metadata_v1.0.pdf” for details on the data acqusition, processing and structure.
This is a bedrock geological map of Jan Mayen distributed as vector files, a georeferenced raster and a related non-spatial lithostratigraphy table.
The map was compiled by W.K. Dallmann and published in Gabrielsen et al. (1997). A version was also published in Dallmann (2014), and the geology of this current edition is equivalent to that publication. The compilation was based on Imsland (1978), Roberts and Hawkins (1965) and Siggerud (1972, 1986)
Snow depth, snow water equivalent and basal ice thickness measurements were taken during the SIOS SnowPilot campaign in Spring 2022. Snowpits were dug on GPR profile crossings in the Fuglebekken and Revdalen catchments in the Hornsund fiord, Spitsbergen catchment. Snow density was measured with an IG PAS snow tube, and snow depth and basal ice (ice forming on the ground surface) thickness were measured with an avalanche probe.
The automated nivological station was installed in November 2020 in a flat area over the tundra about 80 meters far from the Gruvebadet Atmospheric Laboratory and nearby a snow sampling site from where weekly snow samples are collected for chemical analysis. Sensors (Pt100 1/3 DIN) have been calibrated by their companies before installation and are connected to a datalogger for continuous acquisition. For all the parameters, data are logged with 10-minute time resolution and then averaged over 1 hour. This activity is carried out by the Aldo Pontremoli Centre part of the Joint Research Agreement ENI-CNR, in the framework of the SnowCorD project (SIOS Core Data).
The automated station to measures snow cover is operating at the Amundsen-Nobile Climate Change Tower since 2010, which is in a tundra site almost flat, located in the Kolhaugen area. The station is part of a complex infrastructure where multi-disciplinary observations are routinely performed. Data were collected using an ultrasonic distance sensor. This activity is carried out in the framework of the SnowCorD project (SIOS Core Data).
The automated nivological station was installed in November 2020 in a flat area over the tundra about 80 meters far from the Gruvebadet Atmospheric Laboratory and nearby a snow sampling site from where weekly snow samples are collected for chemical analysis. Sensors (NESA LU06) have been calibrated by their companies before installation and are connected to a datalogger for continuous acquisition. For all the parameters, data are logged with 10-minute time resolution and then averaged over 1 hour. This activity is carried out by the Aldo Pontremoli Centre part of the Joint Research Agreement ENI-CNR, in the framework of the SnowCorD project (SIOS Core Data).
The automated station is operating at the Amundsen-Nobile Climate Change Tower since 2010, which is in a tundra site almost flat, located in the Kolhaugen area. The station is part of a complex infrastructure where multi-disciplinary observations are routinely performed. The instrument used for the meauserements is a PT100 thermocouple. This activity is carried out in the framework of the SnowCorD project (SIOS Core Data).