Online Links:
Range of values | |
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Minimum: | 0 |
Maximum: | 389 |
Units: | centimeters |
Resolution: | 1 |
Range of values | |
---|---|
Minimum: | 0 |
Maximum: | 389 |
Units: | centimeters |
Resolution: | 1 |
Value | Definition |
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? (literal question-mark) | The value is not known |
Range of values | |
---|---|
Minimum: | 50.0 |
Maximum: | 90.0 |
Units: | Decimal degrees |
Resolution: | 0.01 |
Value | Definition |
---|---|
? (literal question-mark) | The value is not known |
Range of values | |
---|---|
Minimum: | -180.0 |
Maximum: | 180.0 |
Units: | Decimal degrees |
Resolution: | 0.01 |
Value | Definition |
---|---|
? (literal question-mark) | The value is not known |
Range of values | |
---|---|
Minimum: | 0 |
Maximum: | 4426 |
Units: | meters |
Resolution: | 1 |
Range of values | |
---|---|
Minimum: | 20 |
Maximum: | 3175 |
Units: | individual specimens |
Resolution: | 1 |
We are grateful to the shipboard scientists and crews of cruises who obtained Arctic cores and samples that provided the material for this database. We are also especially appreciative of the following colleagues who have freely and kindly provided material for ostracode study: Dr. J. T. Andrews, K. Foley, Prof. D. Fütterer, Dr. A. Grantz, Dr. S. Ishman, Dr. E. Reimnitz, Dr. P. Barnes, Dr. S. Lehman, Dr. A. Mackensen, Dr. D. Nurnberg, Dr. L. Polyak, Dr. R.Z. Poore, Dr. R. Spielhagen, Dr. R. Stein, Prof. J. Thiede, Dr. C. Vogt, Dr. J. Wollenburg. Much of the ostracode research was supported by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Global Change and Climate History Program, in collaboration with INSTAAR (University of Colorado) and the Institute of Earth Studies, Aberystwyth, (University College, Wales), and with assistance from the Alfred Wegener Institute (Bremerhaven) and GEOMAR (Kiel). Most of the taxonomy of this database was agreed upon at a conference on deep-sea Ostracoda held in summer, 1993, at the USGS in Reston, Virginia, sponsored by the USGS Global Change and Climate History Program.
Ostracodes are a microfossil group of bivalved Crustacea that secrete a calcareous shell commonly preserved in sediments in the Arctic region. Because many ostracode species have ecological limits controlled by temperature, salinity, oxygen, food and other factors, they can provide an important tool for paleoceanographic reconstruction in the Arctic.
Alaska 66 S5-77-BS-29 S5-77-BS-16 S5-77-BS-18 S5-77-BS-27 Alpha-H #9 Alpha-H #4 Bart. LT 27 Hazel 8 AW-EH-2 Barnes 44-80 Barnes 45-80 Eluitkit Pass AW-R-1 Thule, N. Sta.Bay (2) AW-CFNeither geographic location nor water depth is available for core Pl88-AR-BC22
Are there legal restrictions on access or use of the data?Access_Constraints: None
Use_Constraints: None
Data format: | Sample labels, taxon counts, and totals. in format Columnar text (tab-delimited) |
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Network links: |
http://geo-nsdi.er.usgs.gov/metadata/other/prism-arctic-ostracod/data.zip |