124ae988-41d3-4555-b704-5acc85633a05
English
ISO/IEC 8859-1 (also known as Latin 1)
dataset
dataset
Environmental Information Data Centre
Lancaster Environment Centre, Library Avenue, Bailrigg
Lancaster
LA1 4AP
UK
info@eidc.ac.uk
pointOfContact
2021-06-25T18:34:14
UK GEMINI
2.3
OSGB 1936 / British National Grid
Hourly micro-meteorological data from Climoor fieldsite in Clocaenog Forest
2014-03-07
publication
1392050801298
CEH:EIDC:
https://catalogue.ceh.ac.uk/id/124ae988-41d3-4555-b704-5acc85633a05
10.5285/124ae988-41d3-4555-b704-5acc85633a05
doi:
Sowerby, A., Emmett, B.A. (2014). Hourly micro-meteorological data from Climoor fieldsite in Clocaenog Forest. NERC Environmental Information Data Centre 10.5285/124ae988-41d3-4555-b704-5acc85633a05
[THIS DATASET HAS BEEN WITHDRAWN]. This dataset contains hourly micro-meteorological data from the experimental plots at the Climoor field site in Clocaenog forest, NE Wales. It runs from 11/9/2008 until 31/12/2013, and contains air temperature, soil temperature at two depths (5cm and 20cm) as well as soil moisture. Climoor is a climate change experiment which investigates the possible impact of increased temperatures and repeated summer drought on an Atlantic upland moorland. The experiment uses automatic roof technology to warm experimental plots by 0.5 - 1 degC and reproduces drought conditions in other experimental plots (July to September annually). In 2014, the Climoor experiment was the second longest running climate change experiment in the UK and data from the experiment has been used in several modelling exercises. The site was originally established under a EU consortium project - called CLIMOOR - where replica manipulation experiments were built in six European countries. As well as our site in North-East Wales (United Kingdom), there are identical sites in Denmark, the Netherlands, Sardinia (Italy) and Hungary. There was also a site in Catalonia (Spain). Full details about this dataset can be found at https://doi.org/10.5285/124ae988-41d3-4555-b704-5acc85633a05
Emmett, B.A.
UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
enquiries@ceh.ac.uk
pointOfContact
Sowerby, A.
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
enquiries@ceh.ac.uk
author
Emmett, B.A.
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
enquiries@ceh.ac.uk
author
NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre
enquiries@ceh.ac.uk
custodian
NERC Environmental Information Data Centre
enquiries@ceh.ac.uk
publisher
UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
enquiries@ceh.ac.uk
owner
unknown
Environmental Monitoring Facilities
theme
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0
2008-06-01
publication
Climate and climate change
biogeochemistry
meteorology
otherRestrictions
no limitations
otherRestrictions
This resource is made available under the terms of the Open Government Licence
otherRestrictions
© UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
otherRestrictions
If you reuse this data, you should cite: Sowerby, A., Emmett, B.A. (2014). Hourly micro-meteorological data from Climoor fieldsite in Clocaenog Forest. NERC Environmental Information Data Centre https://doi.org/10.5285/124ae988-41d3-4555-b704-5acc85633a05
textTable
English
utf8
environment
2008-09-11
2013-12-31
-3.479
-3.391
53.033
53.077
Comma-separated values (CSV)
NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre
enquiries@ceh.ac.uk
distributor
dataset
dataset
Commission Regulation (EU) No 1089/2010 of 23 November 2010 implementing Directive 2007/2/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards interoperability of spatial data sets and services
2010-12-08
Data was transferred from loggers at the field site onto CEH Bangor's server via a remote telemetry system. Each morning, the previous days data was transferred via telemetry. An automated script transferred the data into the project shared area of the shared network drive. Data quality checking was done on a regular basis by an experienced member of the team who has worked at the field site and on data from the Clocaenog site for 14 years. Data was visually inspected using basic graphing tools, and erroneous values were removed, taking into account the weather at the site during the period in question. Data processing steps included using a macro to combine data from individual 24 hour periods into larger timed periods, then data was cut/pasted into raw data files. Data here is collated raw data, and has only had erroneous values removed.