Tennessee Weather Station Data (2010)
Creator(s):
Brantley, Susan L
Dere, Ashlee L
White, Tim S
McKay, Larry
Duffy, Collin
Abstract:
Weather stations deployed across the CZO Shale Transect, including sites in New York, Virginia, Tennessee, Alabama and Puerto Rico, provide continuous measurements of climatic conditions influencing shale weathering. Measurements are recorded every two hours and include precipitation, air temperature, relative humidity, solar radiation, wind speed, soil temperature, soil moisture, soil electrical conductivity, CZO, Shale Transect
How to cite this dataset:
Brantley, S. L., Dere, A. L., White, T. S., McKay, L., Duffy, C., 2014. Tennessee Weather Station Data (2010), Version 1.0. Interdisciplinary Earth Data Alliance (IEDA).
https://doi.org/10.1594/IEDA/100470. Accessed 2024-12-06.
DOI Creation Date:
2014-07-31
Related
Publication(s):
Ashlee Dere, (2014), Rates and mechanisms of shale weathering across a latitudinal climosequence, Ph.D. Dissertation, The Pennsylvania State University
License:
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States [CC-BY-NC-SA-3.0]
Funding source(s):
National Science Foundation:
0725019Keyword(s):
Coverage Scope: Regional (Continents, Oceans)
Geographic Location: Tennessee
User Contributed Keyword(s):
precipitation, air temperature, relative humidity, solar radiation, wind speed, soil temperature, soil moisture and soil electrical conductivity.
Data Available On:
2014-08-01