Dataset Search
Sort By
Search results
117903 results found
ru28-20230906T1601
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Deployment of a Slocum glider to perform seasonal surveys of dissolved oxygen concentrations in the shallow coastal waters of New Jersey. This deployment is part of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection's yearly coastal waters oxygen monitoring efforts. This glider carried a CTD, Seabird Scientific ECO triplet fluorescence-backscatter-chlorophyll a sensor, and Aanderaa dissolved oxygen sensor.
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru28-20230906T1601
ru29-20130111T0724-delayed
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
First leg of the ru29 Challenger mission from South Africa to Brazil. The glider was deployed off the coast of Cape Town, South Africa and transected to Ascension Island. The Challenger Mission is a re-creation of the first global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS Challenger in 1872. A fleet of up to 16 autonomous underwater gliders will be deployed in all five ocean basins.
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru29-20130111T0724-delayed
ru29-20131110T1400-delayed
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Second leg of the ru29 Challenger mission from South Africa to Brazil. The glider was deployed off the coast of Ascension Island and transected to Ubatuba, Brazil. The Challenger Mission is a re-creation of the first global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS Challenger in 1872. A fleet of up to 16 autonomous underwater gliders will be deployed in all five ocean basins.
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru29-20131110T1400-delayed
ru29-20140711T1422-delayed
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Next leg of the ru29 Challenger mission from Brazil to South Africa. The Challenger Mission is a re-creation of the first global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS Challenger in 1872. A fleet of up to 16 autonomous underwater gliders will be deployed in all five ocean basins. The goals of the project are the spread ocean literacy, educate the general population about the ocean's impact on global climate and provide real-time temperature, salinity and density profiles for assimilation into regional and global weather forecasting models.
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru29-20140711T1422-delayed
ru29-20141117T1306-delayed
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Continuation of the ru29 Challenger mission from Brazil to South Africa. The Challenger Mission is a re-creation of the first global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS Challenger in 1872. A fleet of up to 16 autonomous underwater gliders will be deployed in all five ocean basins. The goals of the project are the spread ocean literacy, educate the general population about the ocean's impact on global climate and provide real-time temperature, salinity and density profiles for assimilation into regional and global weather forecasting models.
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru29-20141117T1306-delayed
ru29-20150623T1046
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Third leg of the ru29 Challenger mission from Brazil to
South Africa. The Challenger Mission is a re-creation of the
first global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS
Challenger in 1872. A fleet of up to 16 autonomous underwater
gliders will be deployed in all five ocean basins. The goals of
the project are the spread ocean literacy, educate the general
population about the ocean's impact on global climate and provide
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru29-20150623T1046
ru29-20161105T0131
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
The Challenger Glider Mission is a re-creation of the first
global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS Challenger
from 1872-1876. The goals of the mission are to establish a
collaborative international network of autonomous underwater
glider ports, to assess global ocean model predictive skill while
contributing real-time profile data for assimilation in ocean
forecast models by operational centers worldwide, and to crowd
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru29-20161105T0131
ru29-20180812T0220
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
The Challenger Glider Mission is a re-creation of the first global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS Challenger from 1872-1876. The goals of the mission are to establish a collaborative international network of autonomous underwater glider ports, to assess global ocean model predictive skill while contributing real-time profile data for assimilation in ocean forecast models by operational centers worldwide, and to crowd source student-based ocean research and discovery. This Indian Ocean leg of the mission begins in Sri Lanka and runs toward Mauritius.
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru29-20180812T0220
ru29-20190906T1535
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
The Challenger Glider Mission is a re-creation of the first global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS Challenger from 1872-1876. The goals of the mission are to establish a collaborative international network of autonomous underwater glider ports, to assess global ocean model predictive skill while contributing real-time profile data for assimilation in ocean forecast models by operational centers worldwide, and to crowd source student-based ocean research and discovery. Glider is providing temperature, conductivity, salinity, density and current profile observations.
Modified:
Source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/metadata/geoportal//rest/metadata/item/ru29-20190906T1535
ru29-20190906T1535 Delayed Mode Science Profiles
Data provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
The Challenger Glider Mission is a re-creation of the first global scientific ocean survey conducted by the HMS Challenger from 1872-1876. The goals of the mission are to establish a collaborative international network of autonomous underwater glider ports, to assess global ocean model predictive skill while contributing real-time profile data for assimilation in ocean forecast models by operational centers worldwide, and to crowd source student-based ocean research and discovery. Glider is providing temperature, conductivity, salinity, density and current profile observations.
Modified: