Океанография

Океанография

  1. ftp://atlantic.ocean.fsu.edu/pub/ — East coast tidal heights and winds in «pub/Tidedata», QuickBasic IBM-PC shareware to compute tides and currents in «pub/Tides», Luyten & Stommel oceanographic atlas in «pub/LiveAtlas», and other related items.
  2. https://diu.cms.udel.edu gopher://diu.cms.udel.edu — OCEANIC, the Ocean Information Centre at the University of Delaware, contains information about data collected for WOCE and TOGA COARE. In addition OCEANIC has a searchable international research ship schedule database, a searchable directory of names/addresses/e-mail of scientists involved in WOCE, and numerous links to WOCE data facilities and other oceanographic information systems.
  3. https://ftp.csr.utexas.edu/sst.html ftp://ftp.csr.utexas.edu/pub/sst — Sea level anomalies are routinely computed using TOPEX/POSEIDON (T/P) Interim Geophysical Data Records (IGDRs) by the University of Texas Centre for Space Research (UT/CSR) as soon as the data for a complete 10-day repeat cycle are available, approximately 1 to 2 weeks after the end of a cycle.
  4. https://www.esdim.noaa.gov — Environmental Information Services: Weather reports for US, Hurricane, Solar Terrestrial Physics marine biology, Sea Surface temperature, Satellite imagery
  5. https://www.ml.csiro.au — The CSIRO (Australia) Division of Oceanography
  6. https://www.mth.uea.ac.uk/climateinfo.html — Oceanography, Meteorology and Climate
  7. https://www.oceanweather.com/~oceanwx/data.html Global current marine observations and significant wave height map.
  8. https://www.publicaffairs.noaa.gov/releases2000/mar00/noaa00020.html Scientists at NOAA have discovered that the world ocean has warmed significantly during the past 40 years. The largest warming has occurred in the upper 300 metres of the world ocean on average by 0.56 degrees F. The water in the upper 3000 metres warmed on average by 0.11 degrees F. These findings represent the first time scientists have quantified temperature changes in all of the world’s oceans from the surface to 3000 metres depth.