PacIOOS ERDDAP
Easier access to scientific data
 
 
griddap Subset tabledap Make A Graph wms files Title Summary FGDC ISO 19115 Info Background Info RSS Email Institution Dataset ID
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/aws_crrf https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/aws_crrf.graph CRRF Weather Station: Palau: Koror: Ngeanges Island Since 2007, the Coral Reef Research Foundation (CRRF) has operated a Campbell Scientific automatic weather station (AWS) in Palau designed to measure meteorological/atmospheric conditions relevant to Koror State's Rock Islands Southern Lagoon, a World Heritage Site. With little flat land in the Rock Islands, the weather station is located on a 40-ft tower situated on a karst ridge on Ngeanges Island at 100 ft elevation, about 5.4 km (3.5 mi) from CRRF's study site at Jellyfish Lake. It measures a suite of atmospheric conditions for comparison with CRRF's temporary, floating weather station located on a tripod in Jellyfish Lake, and provides vital data for studying how local weather conditions and ENSO events affect the marine lake environment.\n\ncdm_data_type = TimeSeries\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (Distance above mean sea level, m)\nstation_name (station)\nair_temperature (Celsius)\nair_temperature_max (maximum air temperature, Celsius)\nair_temperature_max_time (maximum air temperature: observation time, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nair_temperature_min (minimum air temperature, Celsius)\nair_temperature_min_time (minimum air temperature: observation time, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nair_temperature_std (air temperature standard deviation, Celsius)\nwind_speed (m/s)\nwind_speed_max (gust speed, m/s)\nwind_speed_max_time (gust speed: observation time, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nwind_speed_min (minimum wind speed, m/s)\nwind_speed_min_time (minimum wind speed: observation time, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nwind_speed_std (wind speed standard deviation, m/s)\nwind_from_direction (wind direction, degrees)\nwind_from_direction_std (wind direction standard deviation, degrees)\nrainfall_amount (total rainfall, mm)\n... (23 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/aws_crrf_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/aws_crrf_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/aws_crrf/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/weather/obs-koror/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/aws_crrf.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=aws_crrf&showErrors=false&email= Coral Reef Research Foundation (CRRF) aws_crrf
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/aws_himb.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/aws_himb https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/aws_himb.graph HIMB Weather Station: Moku o Loe (Coconut Island), Oahu, Hawaii The Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology (HIMB) automatic weather station (AWS) records hourly measurements of precipitation, air temperature, wind speed and direction, and irradiance. Sensors include an Eppley 295-385 nm ultraviolet (UV) radiometer, a LiCor 200SZ Pyranometer, and a LiCor Quantameter (400-700 nm). The sensors are located on the roof of HIMB's Point Lab on Moku o Loe (Coconut Island) in Kaneohe Bay on the windward (eastern) coast of Oahu in Hawaii. An accompanying sea water temperature sensor is located less than 10 m offshore of the weather station at a shallow depth of approximately 1 m.\n\ncdm_data_type = TimeSeries\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (Distance above mean sea level, m)\nstation_name (station)\nair_temperature (air temperature (processed), Celsius)\nsea_water_temperature (water temperature (processed), Celsius)\nwind_speed (wind speed (processed), m/s)\ngust_speed (gust speed (processed), m/s)\nwind_from_direction (wind direction (processed), degrees)\nwind_from_direction_std (standard deviation of wind direction (processed), degrees)\nrainfall_amount (total rainfall (processed), mm)\nshortwave_radiation (downwelling shortwave radiation (processed), W/m2)\nultraviolet_radiation (ultraviolet radiation (processed), W/m2)\nphotosynthetic_radiation (photosynthetically active radiation (processed), umol m-2 s-1)\nair_temperature_raw (air temperature (raw), Celsius)\nair_temperature_dm_qd (air temperature delayed-mode quality descriptor, 1)\nair_temperature_qc_agg (QARTOD Aggregate/Rollup Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_atn (QARTOD Attenuated Signal Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_clm (QARTOD Climatology Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_flt (QARTOD Flat Line Test (processed), 1)\n... (139 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/aws_himb_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/aws_himb_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/aws_himb/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/weather/obs-mokuoloe/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/aws_himb.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=aws_himb&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) aws_himb
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/beachcam_001 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/beachcam_001.graph https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/files/beachcam_001/ PacIOOS Beach Camera 001: Waikiki, Oahu, Hawaii A digital camera on top of the Sheraton Waikiki hotel was used to photograph the shoreline of Waikiki beach along the South Shore of the island of Oahu in the State of Hawaii. The oblique camera view presented here captures the shoreline leading southeast towards Diamond Head crater. It operated for over 4.5 years between February 5, 2009 and October 13, 2013. Capturing hourly snapshots at a set vantage point during the local daytime hours of 6:00 AM or 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM, these images are useful for tracking beach dynamics such as wave run-up, sand movement, and turbidity plumes over time. The camera was mounted on top of a 3 meter wall extending above the roof surface for a total height of 93 meters above ground level or 96 meters above mean sea level. See also beachcam_002 for an alternate camera view from the same location pointing directly downwards.\n\ncdm_data_type = Other\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\naboveGround (Height, m)\nurl\nname (File Name)\nsize (bytes)\nfileType (File Type)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/beachcam_001_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/beachcam_001_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/beachcam_001/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/shoreline/beachcam-waikiki/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/beachcam_001.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=beachcam_001&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) beachcam_001
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/beachcam_002 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/beachcam_002.graph https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/files/beachcam_002/ PacIOOS Beach Camera 002: Waikiki (Sheraton Boardwalk), Oahu, Hawaii A digital camera on top of the Sheraton Waikiki hotel was used to photograph the shoreline of Waikiki beach along the South Shore of the island of Oahu in the State of Hawaii. The orthogonal camera view presented here is taken in the nadir direction (vertically downwards) towards the Sheraton boardwalk and its nearshore surroundings. It operated for over 4.5 years between February 5, 2009 and October 13, 2013. Capturing hourly snapshots at a set vantage point during the local daytime hours of 6:00 AM or 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM, these images are useful for tracking beach dynamics such as wave run-up, sand movement, and turbidity plumes over time. The camera was mounted on top of a 3 meter wall extending above the roof surface for a total height of 93 meters above ground level or 96 meters above mean sea level. See also beachcam_001 for an oblique camera view from the same location pointing southeast towards Diamond Head crater.\n\ncdm_data_type = Other\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\naboveGround (Height, m)\nurl\nname (File Name)\nsize (bytes)\nfileType (File Type)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/beachcam_002_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/beachcam_002_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/beachcam_002/index.htmlTable http://www.pacioos.hawaii.edushoreline/beachcam-waikiki-sheraton/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/beachcam_002.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=beachcam_002&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) beachcam_002
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/beachcam_003 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/beachcam_003.graph https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/files/beachcam_003/ PacIOOS Beach Camera 003: Waimea Bay, Oahu, Hawaii A digital camera mounted inside the bell tower of the Mission of Sts. Peter and Paul church was used to photograph the shoreline of Waimea Bay beach park on the North Shore of the island of Oahu in the State of Hawaii. The oblique camera view presented here captures the entire breadth of the beach park looking outwards over Kamehameha Highway towards the southwest. It operated for over 4.5 years between February 5, 2009 and October 14, 2013. Capturing hourly snapshots at a set vantage point during the local daytime hours of 6:00 AM or 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM, these images are useful for tracking beach dynamics such as wave run-up, sand movement, turbidity plumes, and Waimea River outflow over time. The camera was mounted in the bell tower windows for a total height of 20 meters above ground level or 31 meters above mean sea level. See also beachcam_004 for an alternate camera view from the same location pointing further offshore inside of Waimea Bay.\n\ncdm_data_type = Other\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\naboveGround (Height, m)\nurl\nname (File Name)\nsize (bytes)\nfileType (File Type)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/beachcam_003_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/beachcam_003_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/beachcam_003/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/shoreline/beachcam-waimea/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/beachcam_003.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=beachcam_003&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) beachcam_003
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/beachcam_004 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/beachcam_004.graph https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/files/beachcam_004/ PacIOOS Beach Camera 004: Waimea Bay (Offshore), Oahu, Hawaii A digital camera mounted inside the bell tower of the Mission of Sts. Peter and Paul church was used to photograph Waimea Bay on the North Shore of the island of Oahu in the State of Hawaii. The oblique camera view presented here captures the entire breadth of the bay at a distance offshore of the beach park (not visible) looking outwards over Kamehameha Highway towards Kaena Point in the southwest. It operated for over 4.5 years between February 5, 2009 and October 14, 2013. Capturing hourly snapshots at a set vantage point during the local daytime hours of 6:00 AM or 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM, these images are useful for tracking ocean wave and water dynamics over time. The camera was mounted in the bell tower windows for a total height of 20 meters above ground level or 31 meters above mean sea level. See also beachcam_003 for an alternate camera view from the same location pointing further inshore of Waimea Bay along the shoreline of the beach park.\n\ncdm_data_type = Other\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\naboveGround (Height, m)\nurl\nname (File Name)\nsize (bytes)\nfileType (File Type)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/beachcam_004_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/beachcam_004_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/beachcam_004/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/shoreline/beachcam-waimea-offshore/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/beachcam_004.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=beachcam_004&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) beachcam_004
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_114_003 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_114_003.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 114: Mission 3 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 3 of SeaGlider 114.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_114_003_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_114_003_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_114_003/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_114_003.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_114_003&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_114_003
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_114_004 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_114_004.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 114: Mission 4 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 4 of SeaGlider 114.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_114_004_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_114_004_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_114_004/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_114_004.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_114_004&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_114_004
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_001 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_001.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 1 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 1 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_001_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_001_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_001/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_001.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_001&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_001
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_002 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_002.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 2 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 2 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_002_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_002_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_002/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_002.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_002&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_002
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_003 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_003.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 3 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 3 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_003_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_003_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_003/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_003.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_003&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_003
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_006 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_006.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 6 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 6 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_006_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_006_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_006/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_006.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_006&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_006
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_007 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_007.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 7 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 7 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_007_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_007_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_007/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_007.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_007&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_007
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_008 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_008.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 8 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 8 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_008_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_008_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_008/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_008.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_008&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_008
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_009 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_009.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 9 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 9 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_009_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_009_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_009/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_009.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_009&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_009
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_148_017 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_148_017.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 148: Mission 17 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about ocean conditions. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 17 of SeaGlider 148.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\nglider (seaglider)\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_148_017_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_148_017_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_148_017/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_148_017.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_148_017&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_148_017
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_512_011 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_512_011.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 512: Mission 11 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about ocean conditions. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 11 of SeaGlider 512.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\nglider (seaglider)\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_512_011_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_512_011_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_512_011/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_512_011.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_512_011&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_512_011
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_001 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_001.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 523: Mission 1 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 1 of SeaGlider 523.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_523_001_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_523_001_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_523_001/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_523_001.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_523_001&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_523_001
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_003 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_003.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 523: Mission 3 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 3 of SeaGlider 523.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_523_003_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_523_003_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_523_003/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_523_003.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_523_003&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_523_003
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_004 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_004.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 523: Mission 4 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 4 of SeaGlider 523.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_523_004_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_523_004_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_523_004/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_523_004.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_523_004&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_523_004
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_006 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_006.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 523: Mission 6 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about ocean conditions. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 6 of SeaGlider 523.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\nglider (seaglider)\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_523_006_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_523_006_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_523_006/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_523_006.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_523_006&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_523_006
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/aws_hnlpier1.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/aws_hnlpier1 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/aws_hnlpier1.graph PacIOOS Weather Station: Honolulu Harbor Entrance, Oahu, Hawaii The Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) operates a Davis Instruments automatic weather station (AWS) near the entrance to Honolulu Harbor on the leeward (western) coast of Oahu in Hawaii to aid with navigation. The station records measurements every 5 minutes of air temperature, wind speed and direction, precipitation, relative humidity, and air pressure. Sensors are located at Pier 1, installed on a tower at an elevation of 64 feet (19.5 meters) above sea level. The station is owned by the Hawaii Pilots Association (HPA). PacIOOS maintains the station and provides data access.\n\ncdm_data_type = TimeSeries\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (Distance above mean sea level, m)\nstation_name (station)\nair_temperature (air temperature (processed), Celsius)\nwind_speed (wind speed (processed), m/s)\ngust_speed (gust speed (processed), m/s)\nwind_from_direction (wind direction (processed), degrees)\nrainfall_rate (rain rate (processed), mm/h)\nrelative_humidity (relative humidity (processed), %)\nair_pressure (air pressure (processed), millibars)\nair_temperature_raw (air temperature (raw), Celsius)\nair_temperature_dm_qd (air temperature delayed-mode quality descriptor, 1)\nair_temperature_qc_agg (QARTOD Aggregate/Rollup Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_gap (QARTOD Gap Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_syn (QARTOD Syntax Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_loc (QARTOD Location Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_rng (QARTOD Gross Range Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_clm (QARTOD Climatology Test (processed), 1)\nair_temperature_qc_spk (QARTOD Spike Test (processed), 1)\n... (92 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/aws_hnlpier1_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/aws_hnlpier1_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/aws_hnlpier1/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/weather/obs-honolulu/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/aws_hnlpier1.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=aws_hnlpier1&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) aws_hnlpier1
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_171406.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_171406 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_171406.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 171406 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_171406_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_171406_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_171406/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_171406.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_171406&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_171406
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_171409.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_171409 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_171409.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 171409 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_171409_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_171409_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_171409/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_171409.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_171409&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_171409
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176025.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176025 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176025.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 176025 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_176025_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_176025_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_176025/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_176025.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_176025&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_176025
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176027.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176027 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176027.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 176027 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_176027_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_176027_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_176027/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_176027.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_176027&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_176027
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176028.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176028 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176028.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 176028 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_176028_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_176028_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_176028/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_176028.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_176028&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_176028
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176029.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176029 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_176029.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 176029 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_176029_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_176029_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_176029/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_176029.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_176029&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_176029
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204412.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204412 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204412.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 204412 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_204412_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_204412_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_204412/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_204412.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_204412&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_204412
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204413.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204413 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204413.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 204413 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_204413_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_204413_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_204413/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_204413.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_204413&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_204413
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204414.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204414 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204414.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 204414 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_204414_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_204414_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_204414/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_204414.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_204414&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_204414
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204416.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204416 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_204416.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 204416 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_204416_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_204416_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_204416/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_204416.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_204416&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_204416
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244397.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244397 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244397.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 244397 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_244397_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_244397_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_244397/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_244397.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_244397&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_244397
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244399.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244399 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244399.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 244399 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_244399_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_244399_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_244399/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_244399.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_244399&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_244399
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244400.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244400 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_244400.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 244400 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_244400_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_244400_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_244400/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_244400.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_244400&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_244400
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_285442.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_285442 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/himb_shark_profiles_285442.graph Shark-Borne Temperature Profiles: Tiger Shark 285442 Ocean temperature depth profiles as measured via a tagged tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier). Data are transmitted via satellite when the shark's dorsal fin surfaces the water, including ocean temperatures at 15 depths distributed across the most recent ascending profile. The timestamp and spatial coordinates of each surface transmission are assigned to the entire profile.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_id (profile identifier)\ntime (surface/transmission time of profile, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\naltitude (m)\ntemperature (mean temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_min (minimum temperature, Celsius)\ntemperature_max (maximum temperature, Celsius)\nlocation_time (surface/transmission time of latitude/longitude position, seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlocation_source (source of latitude/longitude surface position, 1)\nlocation_class (positional accuracy flag, 1)\nerror_radius (radius in meters of Argos estimated geolocation error, m)\nerror_semi_major_axis (semi-major axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_semi_minor_axis (semi-minor axis of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, m)\nerror_ellipse_orientation (orientation from true north of Argos estimated geolocation error ellipse, degrees)\nfastloc_residual (quality indicator of Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nfastloc_time_error (estimated error of observed time of Fastloc geolocation, seconds)\ngps_satellites (number of GPS satellites used in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\ngps_bad_satellites (number of GPS satellites discarded in Fastloc geolocation, 1)\nptt (Argos PTT tag identifier, 0)\ndeployment_id (deployment identifier, 0)\nspecies_scientific (species scientific name, 0)\nspecies_common (species common name, 0)\nspecimen_sex (1)\n... (4 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/himb_shark_profiles_285442_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/himb_shark_profiles_285442_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/himb_shark_profiles_285442/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/projects/sharks/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/himb_shark_profiles_285442.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=himb_shark_profiles_285442&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) himb_shark_profiles_285442
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/griddap/usgsCeSS111 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/griddap/usgsCeSS111.graph https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/wms/usgsCeSS111/request Topography, Smith & Sandwell v11.1, 1/60-degree Global seafloor topography from satellite altimetry and ship depth soundings.\n\ncdm_data_type = Grid\nVARIABLES (all of which use the dimensions [latitude][longitude]):\ntopo (Topography, meters)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/usgsCeSS111_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/usgsCeSS111_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/usgsCeSS111/index.htmlTable https://topex.ucsd.edu/marine_topo/mar_topo.html (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/usgsCeSS111.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=usgsCeSS111&showErrors=false&email= UCSD usgsCeSS111
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/griddap/usgsCeSS111_lon360 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/griddap/usgsCeSS111_lon360.graph Topography, Smith & Sandwell v11.1, 1/60-degree, Lon0360 Global seafloor topography from satellite altimetry and ship depth soundings.\n\ncdm_data_type = Grid\nVARIABLES (all of which use the dimensions [latitude][longitude]):\ntopo (Topography, meters)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/usgsCeSS111_lon360_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/usgsCeSS111_lon360_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/usgsCeSS111_lon360/index.htmlTable https://topex.ucsd.edu/marine_topo/mar_topo.html (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/usgsCeSS111_lon360.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=usgsCeSS111_lon360&showErrors=false&email= UCSD usgsCeSS111_lon360

 
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