Jean-Pierre Barriot, Fangzhao Zhang, Bernard Ducarme, Guy Wöppelmann, Gaël André, Alban Gabillon
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
This article presents a curated database of the sea-level measurements acquired by the network of the five geodetic tide gauges managed over French Polynesia by the Geodesy Observatory of Tahiti from 13 June 2009 to 28 January 2021. A unique feature of this database, with respect to previous databases that host the same raw data, like the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission database (IOC, www.ioc-sealevelmonitoring.org) and the database of ‘Réseaux de référence des observations marégraphiques’ (REFMAR, http://refmar.shom.fr) is that all the time-tags of the raw measurements (1- or 2-min sampling) have been validated and, if necessary, corrected with a precision of 2 min (time shifts of up to 1 hr can be present in the raw data). Possible outliers have also been flagged, but not removed. In addition, smoothed hourly data are also provided, along with tidal analysis results and estimations of the sea-level trends for the five tide gauges, with respect to their local geodetic datum. The database, entitled ‘SEA LEVEL collected from TIDE STATIONS in South Pacific Ocean from 2009-06-13 to 2021-01-28’, can be accessed on the NOAA data servers as ‘NCEI Accession 0244182’ and contains two subsets: The first one is relative to the original sampling rate and the second one is relative to an hourly re-sampling with harmonic tide models for each tide gauge station.
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.