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 by changing the operators used in the text field and prefixing words with '+' and '-' to indicate whether they have to be present or should not be present in the results.
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.
Citation of data and service
If you use data retrieved through this portal, please acknowledge the efforts of the data portal and the data centres contributing.
The information required to properly cite a dataset is normally provided in the discovery metadata the datasets.
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)
Institutions: Norwegian Meteorological Institute / Arctic Data Centre, Danish Meteorological Institute, Norwegian Meteorological Institute / Arctic Data Centre
Last metadata update: 2023-07-14T09:27:43Z
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Abstract:
A 9 month ice drift data set based on VIS and IR data
Institutions: Norwegian Meteorological Institute / Arctic Data Centre, Danish Meteorological Institute, Norwegian Meteorological Institute / Arctic Data Centre
Last metadata update: 2023-07-14T09:06:28Z
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Abstract:
A 9 month ice drift data set based on VIS and IR data
International Polar Year, Integrated Arctic Ocean Observing System - Norway, Developing Arctic Modeling and Observing Capabilities for Long-term Environmental Studies (IPY, iAOOS-Norway, DAMOCLES)
Institutions: Norwegian Polar Institute, Norwegian Meteorological Institute, Norwegian Meteorological Institute / Arctic Data Centre
Last metadata update: 2023-08-14T15:28:42Z
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Abstract:
Radiation measurements made during the spring 2008 cruise to the Fram Strait. Transmission of light through ice, measured by divers on day 4 of fifth floe. At fourth site, approx. 20 m from ice edge, 0.42 m snow on 1.04 m ice. Each measurement type (incident, reflected, etc) was made with a different TriOS Ramses spectroradiometer. These are known to have calibration issues at the longest and shortest wavelengths for which data are reported; we recommend using only data from about 350 to 920 nm. No significant quality control has been done to these data.
Snow cover fraction on ground (SCFG) indicates the area of snow observed from space on land surfaces, in forested areas corrected for the transmissivity of the forest canopy. The SCFG is given in percentage (%) per pixel. The global SCFG product is available at about 1 km pixel size for all land areas, excluding Antarctica and Greenland ice sheets. Ref: Nagler, T.; Schwaizer, G.; Mölg, N.; Keuris, L.; Hetzenecker, M.; Metsämäki, S. (2022): ESA Snow Climate Change Initiative (Snow_cci): Daily global Snow Cover Fraction - snow on ground (SCFG) from MODIS (2000-2020), version 2.0. NERC EDS Centre for Environmental Data Analysis, 23 March 2022. doi:10.5285/8847a05eeda646a29da58b42bdf2a87c. http://dx.doi.org/10.5285/8847a05eeda646a29da58b42bdf2a87c
Institutions: Norwegian Meteorological Institute / Arctic Data Centre, AWI
Last metadata update: 2023-06-29T11:12:39Z
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Abstract:
These CMIP5 model data show interpolated results in Arctic only. Original data
were cut and interpolated for internal use of the EU funded project ACCESS.
Institutions: NORCE Tromsø, Norwegian Meteorological Institute / Arctic Data Centre
Last metadata update: 2022-12-05T13:18:30Z
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Abstract:
Sentinel-1 Wet snow product: The warming climate on Svalbard impacts the amounts of wet snow significantly. Sentinel-1 is sensitive to wet snow as compared with dry snow or bare soil, and the current dataset provides up to daily maps over Svalbard of the spatial distribution of wet snow. The maps are derived from three SAR instriments (Envisat ASAR 2004-2012, Radarsat-2 2012-2014, and Sentinel-1 A/B from 2014-2020). Grid cells are classified with codes where 20=water, 30=nodata, 100=bare ground, 200=dry snow, 205=wetsnow
Weekly Southern Ocean ice limits, have been digitized from U.S. Navy Fleet Weather Facility ice charts, at the Max-Planck Institut fur Meteorologie, Hamburg. Coverage is from 1 January 1973 to 31 June 1978. Data are gridded at 5 degree longitude intervals and are available via ftp.
<strong>Note:</strong> NOAA@NSIDC believes these data to be of value, however, they should be used with caution because we are unable to quality check the data or provide documentation due to lack of funding. If you have any information about this data set that others would find useful, please contact <a href="mailto:nsidc@nsidc.org">NSIDC User Services</a>.
Level-1A global laser pointing data (GLAH04) contain two orbits of attitude data from the spacecraft star tracker, instrument star tracker, gyro, and laser reference system, and other spacecraft attitude data required to calculate precise laser pointing.
This data set contains GPS readings over Antarctica using the Trimble Trimflite differential GPS Navigation System. The readings include latitude, longitude, track, ground speed, off-distance, Positional Dilution of Precision (PDOP), GPS height, easting, northing, and time taken. The data were collected by scientists working on the Investigating the Cryospheric Evolution of the Central Antarctic Plate (ICECAP) project, which is funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), with additional support from NASA Operation IceBridge.
This data set contains measurements of the bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) for two locations in Colorado, USA: Grand Mesa, a snow-covered, forested study site about 40 miles east of Grand Junction; and Senator Beck Basin approximately 80 miles to the SSE of Grand Mesa.
Measurements were acquired using the NASA Cloud Absorption Radiometer (CAR), an airborne multi-angular, multi-wavelength scanning radiometer. The CAR instrument measures scattered light in 14 spectral bands between 0.34 μm and 2.30 μm, which lie in the UV, visible, and near-infrared atmospheric windows.
Data were obtained for a variety of conditions including snow grain size (or age), snow liquid water content, solar zenith angle, cloud cover, and snowpack thickness. The data set can be used to assess the accuracy of satellite reflectance and albedo products in snow-covered, forested landscapes.
The high-resolution Radarsat Antarctic Mapping Project (RAMP) Digital Elevation Model (DEM) combines topographic data from a variety of sources to provide consistent coverage of all of Antarctica.
The Wakasa Bay Field Campaign was conducted to validate rainfall algorithms developed for the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer - Earth Observing System (AMSR-E).
This data set contains the vegetation parameters plant height, row spacing, stand density, and leaf area index (LAI) as part of the Soil Moisture Experiment 2002 (SMEX02).
This data set includes estimates of the location of the grounding zone of Antarctic ice shelves based on laser altimeter data acquired during the Ice, Cloud, and Land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) mission, October 2003 through October 2009. The estimates are based on ICESat repeat-track analysis, which can be used to detect the region of ice flexure across the grounding line, since each repeated pass is acquired at a different tidal phase. The technique provides estimates for the landward limit of flexure, the point where the ice becomes hydrostatically balanced, and the break-in-slope associated with the flexure.
Data files are available via FTP in ASCII text (.txt) format.
This data set provides digital terrain models, snow depth, and canopy height, acquired by a scanning lidar system and derived from Point Cloud Digital Terrain Models (PCDTMs) from two regions of Alaska, USA collected as part of the NASA SnowEx 2023 field campaign. The study sites include a boreal forest environment in the Fairbanks region of central Alaska (the Bonanza Creek Experimental Forest, Caribou Poker Creek watershed, and Farmer’s Loop/Creamer’s Field) and a coastal tundra environment in the North Slope region of the northern Alaska coastal plain (Arctic coastal plain and Upper Kuparuk Toolik). The raw data from which these data are derived are available as <a href="https://nsidc.org/data/SNEX23_Lidar_Raw">SnowEx23 Airborne Lidar Scans Raw, Version 1</a>.