Skip to page navigation menu Skip entire header
Brown University
Skip 13 subheader links

Source code and data for "Can we use sea surface temperature and productivity proxy records to reconstruct Ekman Upwelling?"

Description

Abstract:
This is the data (in netcdf format) and matlab codes supporting the publication, A. Cheung, B. Fox-Kemper, and T. D. Herbert. Can we use sea surface temperature and productivity proxy records to reconstruct Ekman upwelling? Climate of the Past, October 2019. DOI: 10.5194/cp-2019-73
Notes:
The Geostationary Environmental Satellites SST, QuikSCAT surface wind data were obtained from the NASA EOSDIS Physical Oceanography Distributed Active Archive Center at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA. MODIS chlorophyll-a data were obtained from NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Ocean Ecology Laboratory, Ocean Biology Processing Group. AHC was supported by the Brown University Presidential Fellowship. BFK was supported by the Office of Naval Research under award ONR N00014-17-1-2393.

Access Conditions

Use and Reproduction
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Citation

Fox-Kemper, Baylor, Cheung, Anson, and Herbert, Timothy, "Source code and data for 'Can we use sea surface temperature and productivity proxy records to reconstruct Ekman Upwelling?'" (2019). Brown University Open Data Collection. Brown Digital Repository. Brown University Library. https://doi.org/10.26300/41y9-ts23

Relations

Has Parts:

  • Source code and data for "Can we use sea surface temperature and productivity proxy records to reconstruct Ekman Upwelling?"
    • Type: Archive
    • Order: 1
    • View
  • README for Source code and data for "Can we use sea surface temperature and productivity proxy records to reconstruct Ekman Upwelling?"
    • Type: Txt
    • Order: 2
    • View

Collection:

  • Brown University Open Data Collection

    This collection contains open and publicly-funded data sets created by Brown University faculty and student researchers. Increasingly, publishers, and funders are requiring that protocols, data sets, metadata, and code underlying published research be retained and preserved, their locations cited within …
    ...