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Surface Water: Stage, Temperature and Discharge, Teller Road Mile Marker 27, Seward Peninsula, Alaska, 2016-2021

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DataONE2026-03-06 更新2026-03-14 收录
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Surface water data were collected at one location in the Teller Mile 27 (TL_MM27) Research Basin Site, Seward Peninsula (N64 43' 35.29649", W165 56' 48.42823"). The site was installed and measurements collected from April 2016 to September 2021. During the pandemic, a combination of environmental factors (both animals and climate) led to a gap in the data record from late 2019 to June 2021. Station restarted in June 2021 with the same basin outlet and instrumentation type. These data are being collected to better understand the hydrology of this research basin. The data could also be used as supporting measurements for other research and modeling activities. Stream stage and water temperature are measured every 10 minutes. Discharge in the stream is also measured every site visit using one of two different methods. Most discharge measurements in this data set use the classic US Geological Survey (USGS) style wading rod to measure water velocity at multiple points (every 5 or 10 centimeters) across a known cross-section (https://pubs.usgs.gov/tm/tm3-a8/pdf/tm3-a8.pdf). The second method is the salt-slug mass diffusion method (https://www.uvm.edu/bwrl/lab_docs/protocols/2005_Moore_Slug_salt_dilution_gauging_volumetric_method_Streamline.pdf). Combining the continuous data record with the discrete observations, a stage-discharge relationship was developed. Dataset contains 14 *.csv files including a data dictionary and file-level metadata plus one user guide *.pdf file. DATASET UPDATE: The 2016-2019 data were published in 2019. Data collection continued through 2021 and were added to the dataset in 2025. There were no changes to the 2016-2019 data. Data files now have all years for a measurement combined into one file; whereas before, each measurement and each year had an individual file. The Next-Generation Ecosystem Experiments: Arctic (NGEE Arctic), was a research effort to reduce uncertainty in Earth System Models by developing a predictive understanding of carbon-rich Arctic ecosystems and feedbacks to climate. NGEE Arctic was supported by the Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research. The NGEE Arctic project had two field research sites: 1) located within the Arctic polygonal tundra coastal region on the Barrow Environmental Observatory (BEO) and the North Slope near Utqiagvik (Barrow), Alaska and 2) multiple areas on the discontinuous permafrost region of the Seward Peninsula north of Nome, Alaska. Through observations, experiments, and synthesis with existing datasets, NGEE Arctic provided an enhanced knowledge base for multi-scale modeling and contributed to improved process representation at global pan-Arctic scales within the Department of Energy's Earth system Model (the Energy Exascale Earth System Model, or E3SM), and specifically within the E3SM Land Model component (ELM).
创建时间:
2026-03-08
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