Help
  
Home: ABOUT: Monitoring and Observing Systems: International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange (IODE)
an expanded view of Topics and Knowledge in the Atlas
 
Navigate the Atlas:
 Topic Overview
 Editors
 KO Overview
 Owner
 
Jennifer Perce
International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange (IODE) Maintained by IOC  
        
The IODE Programme
 
The IODE Programme is a global network whose goal is free and open access to and exchange of oceanographic data and information among the institutions and agencies in IOC Member States.
 
IODE: A Global Network
 
The IOC's International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange (IODE) system was established in 1961 to :

"enhance marine research, exploration, and development by facilitating the exchange of oceanographic data and information between participating member states."

With the advance of oceanography from a science dealing mostly with local processes to one which is also studying ocean basin and global processes, researchers are more critically dependent on the availability of an international exchange system to provide global data and information from all available sources. Additionally, scientists studying local processes benefit substantially from access to data collected by other member states in their area of interest. The economic benefit of obtaining data by exchange as opposed to collecting it oneself is huge.

The success of the IODE programme depends on the support of participating IOC Member States, and the involvement of many individual institutions and marine scientists, who contribute not only data, but also the necessary expertise to maintain and further develop the IODE system. Without this national support, funded directly by the Member States, the system could not continue to exist.

Although the system itself is an IOC programme, its specific operational services are provided primarily by World Data Centres (WDCs), National Oceanographic Data Centres (NODCs) and Responsible National Oceanographic Data Centres (RNODC), which also operate under the auspices of the International Council for Science (ICSU). RNODCs are National Oceanographic Data Centres who have accepted special additional responsibilities. These can include specific data types (e.g. Drifting Buoys data) or specific regions (e.g. Southern Oceans).

 
Data Centres Around the World: The National Oceanographic Data Centres
 
A National Oceanographic Data Centre (NODC) is a centralized facility that provides continuous ocean data/information, in usable form, to a wide user community. These facilities acquire, process, quality control, inventory, archive and disseminate data in accordance with each member state's respective national responsibilities, which often include not only disseminating data and data products nationally, but also conducting international exchange. In member states that have not established a NODC, NODC duties have been assigned to another other agency within the member state. These agencies are referred to as Designated National Agencies (DNAs). With regard to international data exchange, the most fundamental responsibility of the NODC within the IODE network is to actively seek and acquire, from their national sources, internationally exchangeable data, as well as to process and quality control the data and submit them in a timely fashion to the appropriate WDC for Oceanography or RNODC. In return, the NODC can request and receive from the WDCs for Oceanography or RNODCs similar data or inventory information which they need for their own requirements.
 
 
 
 
TitleGlobal Oceanographic Data Archaeology and Rescue (GODAR)   ( PROJECT )
Project SummaryThe Global Oceanographic Data Archaeology and Rescue (GODAR) Project is sponsored by the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission?s (IOC) International Oceanographic Data Exchange (IODE) Program in cooperation with the U.S. National Oceanographic Data Center and the collocated World Data Center for Oceanography. GODAR seeks to increase the volume of historical oceanographic data available to climate change and other researchers by locating data sets not yet in digital form and ensuring their submission to one of the national data centers. Recognizing that oceanography is an observational science and that the world ocean is a major component of the earth's climate system it is suggested that the IOC sponsor activities that will result in more complete global oceanographic databases. These activities should be viewed as an enhancement of existing IODE activities. The new and enhanced oceanographic databases will be available without restriction to the international science community. We call this effort the Global Oceanographic Data Archaeology and Rescue Project (GODAR). To do the most thorough job possible this project must have a lifetime of 5 to 10 years. Funds to support the activities of this project will be obtained through as many sources independent of IOC as possible, including foundations. Data Archaeology is the term used to describe the process of seeking out, restoring, evaluating, correcting and interpreting historical datasets. Rescue refers to the effort to save data at risk from being lost to the science community. Physical, chemical, and biological oceanographic data as well as surface marine meteorological observations are the specific types of data this project will focus on. These are the data types of greatest concern to IODE and climate research activities. Advances in computer technology both hardware and software (e.g., Relational Database technology) now allow for the construction of integrated global oceanographic databases that include widely disparate types of oceanographic data from different oceanographic disciplines.
KeywordsDATA ARCHAEOLOGY; DATABASES
Lead/Managing OrganizationUS-NODC/ IOC of UNESCO
Contact
Sydney Levitus
Contact PositionProject Manager
Contact EmailSydney.Levitus@noaa.gov
Project Web Address (URL)http://ioc.unesco.org/iode/contents.php?id=3
Additional Linkshttp://www.nodc.noaa.gov ... odar.html
  
1076 Topics - 5135 Related Knowledge - 2534 Members - 34 Editors
generationTime:2005/01/13 12:47:52