The Marine Metadata Interoperability Project is halfway through its first year of marine metadata and community development. In that time it has established Steering and Technical Committees, developed a collaborative web site with many hundreds of references and an active membership, and initiated a domain vocabulary mapping project and demonstration development effort. We describe the project’s international collaboration and results to date, and suggest that metadata is an admirable starting point for collaborations between other science projects. 1
Presented at OceanObs’19, Honolulu, HI, September 16-20, 2019The FAIR principles (Findability, Acces...
Biomolecules, such as DNA and RNA, provide a wealth of information about the distribution and functi...
Taxonomies are always changing; hence providing reliable taxonomic metadata is a difficult task, esp...
Interoperability (MMI) project has focused on improving marine data systems interoperability. Throug...
The U.S. Geological Survey developed a content metadata standard to meet the demands of organizing e...
Climate change and sustainable use of natural capital demand increased collaboration across the scie...
In this paper we describe the methods, goals and early findings of the research endeavor ‘Comparativ...
Data management in the marine sciences faces the complex issue of addressing contrasting cognitive m...
This poster describes the development of international standards to publish oceanographic datasets....
The paradigm shift in marine research moving from the traditional discipline based methodology to a ...
The Marine Data Resources Community (MDRC) was started in 2022 to help catalogue and organise biolog...
Marine knowledge is generated, to a large extent, through monitoring and observation of our seas and...
Biomolecular ocean observing and research is a rapidly evolving field that uses omics approaches to ...
Biomolecular ocean observing and research is a rapidly evolving field that uses omics approaches to ...
Abstract The earth- and ocean-science communities are developing the concept of a "system of sy...
Presented at OceanObs’19, Honolulu, HI, September 16-20, 2019The FAIR principles (Findability, Acces...
Biomolecules, such as DNA and RNA, provide a wealth of information about the distribution and functi...
Taxonomies are always changing; hence providing reliable taxonomic metadata is a difficult task, esp...
Interoperability (MMI) project has focused on improving marine data systems interoperability. Throug...
The U.S. Geological Survey developed a content metadata standard to meet the demands of organizing e...
Climate change and sustainable use of natural capital demand increased collaboration across the scie...
In this paper we describe the methods, goals and early findings of the research endeavor ‘Comparativ...
Data management in the marine sciences faces the complex issue of addressing contrasting cognitive m...
This poster describes the development of international standards to publish oceanographic datasets....
The paradigm shift in marine research moving from the traditional discipline based methodology to a ...
The Marine Data Resources Community (MDRC) was started in 2022 to help catalogue and organise biolog...
Marine knowledge is generated, to a large extent, through monitoring and observation of our seas and...
Biomolecular ocean observing and research is a rapidly evolving field that uses omics approaches to ...
Biomolecular ocean observing and research is a rapidly evolving field that uses omics approaches to ...
Abstract The earth- and ocean-science communities are developing the concept of a "system of sy...
Presented at OceanObs’19, Honolulu, HI, September 16-20, 2019The FAIR principles (Findability, Acces...
Biomolecules, such as DNA and RNA, provide a wealth of information about the distribution and functi...
Taxonomies are always changing; hence providing reliable taxonomic metadata is a difficult task, esp...