CAS Geology (GEO)

Occurrence Specimen
最新版本 published by California Academy of Sciences on 12月 24, 2024 California Academy of Sciences

下載最新版本的 Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A) 資源,或資源詮釋資料的 EML 或 RTF 文字檔。

DwC-A資料集 下載 23,880 紀錄 在 English 中 (810 KB) - 更新頻率: 依其他週期更新
元數據EML檔 下載 在 English 中 (15 KB)
元數據RTF文字檔 下載 在 English 中 (8 KB)

說明

California Academy of Sciences microfossil occurrence data from the former Union Oil of California Collection. Presence/absence data generated under NSF OCE Award #1832828. The data represented here is a small fraction of the overall collection which remains largely undigitized. Please contact us for more information about this collection.

資料紀錄

此資源出現紀錄的資料已發佈為達爾文核心集檔案(DwC-A),其以一或多組資料表構成分享生物多樣性資料的標準格式。 核心資料表包含 23,880 筆紀錄。

此 IPT 存放資料以提供資料儲存庫服務。資料與資源的詮釋資料可由「下載」單元下載。「版本」表格列出此資源的其它公開版本,以便利追蹤其隨時間的變更。

版本

以下的表格只顯示可公開存取資源的已發布版本。

如何引用

研究者應依照以下指示引用此資源。:

Roopnarine P, Garcia C (2024). CAS Geology (GEO). Version 1.13. California Academy of Sciences. Occurrence dataset. http://ipt.calacademy.org:8080/resource?r=geo&v=1.13

權利

研究者應尊重以下權利聲明。:

此資料的發布者及權利單位為 California Academy of Sciences。 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY-NC 4.0) License.

GBIF 註冊

此資源已向GBIF註冊,並指定以下之GBIF UUID: 5e848873-567f-42dd-8a29-88056b9b33a4。  California Academy of Sciences 發佈此資源,並經由GBIF-US同意向GBIF註冊成為資料發佈者。

關鍵字

Occurrence; Specimen; Fossil; foraminifera; Occurrence

聯絡資訊

Peter Roopnarine
  • 出處
  • 連絡人
  • 研究主持人
  • Curator
California Academy of Sciences
  • 55 Music Concourse Dr.
94118 San Francisco
California
US
Christine Garcia
  • 元數據提供者
  • Collection Manager
California Academy of Sciences
  • 55 Music Concourse Dr.
94118 San Francisco
California
US
Christine Garcia
  • 元數據提供者
  • Collections Manager
California Academy of Sciences
  • Invertebrate Zoology & Geology 55 Music Concourse Drive
94118 San Francisco
CA
US

地理涵蓋範圍

Occurrence data primarily concentrated in California, United States of America.

界定座標範圍 緯度南界 經度西界 [31.579, -126.65], 緯度北界 經度東界 [43.58, -112.764]

分類群涵蓋範圍

Foraminifera and metazoans

Phylum Foraminifera (foraminifera), Echinodermata (echinoderm)
Class Bivalvia (clam), Gastropoda (snail)

計畫資料

Paleoceanographic records provide a unique opportunity to understand how ecosystems have responded to rapid environmental change in the past, a topic of significant societal and scientific interest. This project will document ecological changes in nearshore environments over the past several thousand years in Southern California, including investigation of impacts of both past and modern climate change. This work is of particular importance because these coastal ecosystems play critical roles in carbon sequestration, marine fisheries, coastal economies, and cycling of nutrients. As part of an integrated effort, the California Academy of Sciences (CAS) will catalog, digitize and identify fossil samples collected along the California margin. These materials will be combined with samples from available sediment cores to develop a public online digital database through which the research community may access project data and results. Two graduate students per year from the University of California Davis (UCD) will work closely with CAS staff to receive training in core curation and database development. In addition, this project supports the training of two Ph.D. students, and undergraduate research interns at UC Davis and UC Santa Barbara. The project also supports intensive field and laboratory based coursework and mentored research at Bodega Marine Laboratory for two undergraduates per year who are pursuing careers in K-12 STEM teaching. A research blog will be generated to develop scientific communication and writing skills in undergraduate, graduate students and technicians involved in this project. To complete this research, the research team will use sediment records from along the California margin to address two key questions: 1) How did the development of the modern oxygen minimum zone during the Holocene influence marine ecosystems, including multiple stages of perturbation and recovery? 2) Can we identify the marine ecological impacts of the Anthropocene, against a background of decadal-centennial scale variability? The team will utilize recent marine sediments to reconstruct marine microfossil response to both natural and anthropogenic environmental perturbation. This research will utilize a suite of available sedimentary archives (over 20 piston, box and multi cores), with moderately high sedimentation rates and available geochemical records, to identify and interpret metazoan and protistan assemblages. Microfossil assemblages will provide a framework to understand past, modern and future climate and oceanographic processes along the California margin. These results can be directly compared to modern instrumental records, and utilized to better predict future impacts of environmental change in this region.

計畫名稱 California Academy of Sciences fossil collections
經費來源 NSF OCE Award 1832828 https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1832828&HistoricalAwards=false
研究區域描述 Offshore exploratory oil well locations concentrated in the Santa Barbara Basin and Point Conception area.

參與計畫的人員:

Peter Roopnarine
  • 研究主持人
Christine Garcia

收藏資料

蒐藏名稱 CASG Fossil
蒐藏名稱 CASG Microfossil

額外的詮釋資料

替代的識別碼 5e848873-567f-42dd-8a29-88056b9b33a4
http://ipt.calacademy.org:8080/resource?r=geo