Skip to data content Skip to data search

Effects of Warming on a Polar Desert Ecosystem Replicate 1 [Epstein]

Project:

Summary

This dataset measures the effects of warming on a polar desert ecosystem (Replicate 1) from 1995-2005 as part of the ITEX experiment. Each ecosystem has one warming and one control. Each experiment for each ecosystem has five replicates. This dataset includes only the top hit. For more information, please see the readme file.

Data access

  • ORDER data for delivery by FTP

Additional information

Identifier
Versions
  • 1.0 (2007-11-02)
Subscribe Subscribe to receive email when new or updated data is available.
Related projects
Spatial Type multiple
Frequency other
Language English
ISO Topic Categories
  • climatologyMeteorologyAtmosphere
Categories
Platforms
Instruments
GCMD Science Keywords Expand keywords
Documentation
Related links

Temporal coverage

Begin datetime 1995-01-01 00:00:00
End datetime 2005-01-01 23:59:59

Spatial coverage


Map data from IBCSO, IBCAO, and Global Topography.

Maximum (North) Latitude: 90.00, Minimum (South) Latitude: 60.00
Minimum (West) Longitude: -180.00, Maximum (East) Longitude: 180.00

Primary point of contact information

Howard Epstein <hee2b@virginia.edu>

Additional contact information

Citation

Epstein, H., Calef, M. 2007. Effects of Warming on a Polar Desert Ecosystem Replicate 1. Version 1.0. UCAR/NCAR - Earth Observing Laboratory. https://doi.org/10.5065/D62J693D. Accessed 12 Oct 2024.

Today's date is shown: please replace with the date of your most recent access.

Additional citation styles

The citation text below is from the DataCite Content Resolver service and may take a few seconds to load. The styles and locales are obtained from CrossCite, which also provides a citation formatter. See ReFindit for another alternative. Formatting is not perfect: please verify and edit before use. Today's date is shown: please replace with the date of your most recent access.

Style: Locale:

Ancillary information

Metadata download

Note that your browser may not display the above metadata links, but automatically save them as files in a folder such as "Downloads"