Dmitry V. Divine, Adam Steer, Mats A. Granskog, Sebastian Gerland, Øyvind Foss, Anca Cristea, Polona Itkin, Malin Johansson, Emily Down, Agneta Fransson
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Recent decline of sea ice in the Barents Sea represents a clear manifestation of the ongoing Arctic warming. This study presents a compilation of data sets on sea ice physics acquired during 2018–2022 during Nansen Legacy—a Norwegian multidisciplinary national research programme that focused on the northern Barents Sea. The data were acquired using a variety of methods such as sea ice coring, thickness drillings, snow pits, snow depth surveys, drone flights, on-ice and helicopter-borne electromagnetic measurements of sea ice thickness, and ice draft measurements by bottom-anchored moorings. The collected data sets cover several key physical parameters describing the sea ice cover and encompass a range of spatial (local to regional) and temporal (daily to annual) scales. These data sets aid in filling a substantial knowledge gap of recent sea ice conditions in the rapidly changing northern Barents Sea region.
Geoscience Data JournalGEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARYMETEOROLOGY-METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
9.40%
发文量
35
审稿时长
4 weeks
期刊介绍:
Geoscience Data Journal provides an Open Access platform where scientific data can be formally published, in a way that includes scientific peer-review. Thus the dataset creator attains full credit for their efforts, while also improving the scientific record, providing version control for the community and allowing major datasets to be fully described, cited and discovered.
An online-only journal, GDJ publishes short data papers cross-linked to – and citing – datasets that have been deposited in approved data centres and awarded DOIs. The journal will also accept articles on data services, and articles which support and inform data publishing best practices.
Data is at the heart of science and scientific endeavour. The curation of data and the science associated with it is as important as ever in our understanding of the changing earth system and thereby enabling us to make future predictions. Geoscience Data Journal is working with recognised Data Centres across the globe to develop the future strategy for data publication, the recognition of the value of data and the communication and exploitation of data to the wider science and stakeholder communities.