Absorbance
|
The amount of radiation absorbed by a material |
ACCEPTED |
Absorbance, 260nm
|
Absorbance is defined as "the logarithm of the ratio of incident to transmitted radiant power through a sample. Absorbance 260nm describes the absorbance at a wavelength of 260 nm. |
ACCEPTED |
Absorbance, 280nm
|
Absorbance is defined as "the logarithm of the ratio of incident to transmitted radiant power through a sample. Absorbance 280nm describes the absorbance at a wavelength of 280 nm. |
ACCEPTED |
Absorbance ratio, 260/230
|
A ratio shows how many times one number contains another. The absorbance ratio 260/230 is the ratio value between the absorbance value of 260 nm divided by the absorbance value of 230 nm.
Ratios may be unit-less, as in the case they relate quantities in units of the same dimension, even if their units of measurement are initially different. |
ACCEPTED |
Absorbance ratio, 260/280
|
A ratio shows how many times one number contains another. The absorbance ratio 260/280 is the ratio value between the absorbance value of 260 nm divided by the absorbance value of 280 nm.
Ratios may be unit-less, as in the case they relate quantities in units of the same dimension, even if their units of measurement are initially different. |
ACCEPTED |
Absorbance, ultraviolet
|
Absorbance of ultraviolet light at a specified wavelength, typically at 254 or 280 nm for water samples. Not normalized to DOC concentration like variables such as SUVA280. |
ACCEPTED |
Abundance
|
The relative representation of a species in a particular ecosystem. If this generic term is used, the publisher should specify/qualify the species, class, etc. being measured in the method, qualifier, or other appropriate field. |
ACCEPTED |
Abundance
|
The relative representation of a species in a particular ecosystem. If this generic term is used, the publisher should specify/qualify the species, class, etc. being measured in the method, qualifier, or other appropriate field. |
ACCEPTED |
Adsorbable organically bonded halogens
|
Adsorbable organically bonded halogens (AOX). |
ACCEPTED |
Air density
|
The density of air or atmospheric density is the mass per unit volume of Earth's atmosphere. |
ACCEPTED |
Airflow
|
The movement of air. |
ACCEPTED |
Air Pressure
|
- |
PENDING |
air_temperature
|
surface air temp at 2m |
PENDING |
Air temperature
|
The temperature of the atmosphere expressed against the International Temperature Scale 1990 (ITS-90) standard. |
ACCEPTED |
Air velocity, upward
|
A velocity is a vector quantity. "Upward" indicates a vector component which is positive when directed upward (negative downward). Upward air velocity is the vertical component of the 3D air velocity vector. |
ACCEPTED |
Albedo
|
Quotient between "global radiaton" and "global radiation (reflected)" |
ACCEPTED |
Alluvium depth
|
Alluvium is loose, unconsolidated (not cemented together into a solid rock) soil or sediment that has been eroded, reshaped by water in some form, and redeposited in a non-marine setting. Alluvium is typically made up of a variety of materials, including fine particles of silt and clay and larger particles of sand and gravel. When this loose alluvial material is deposited or cemented into a lithological unit, or lithified, it is called an alluvial deposit. |
ACCEPTED |
Altitude
|
Altitude is the (geometric) height above the geoid, which is the reference geopotential surface. The geoid is similar to mean sea level. |
ACCEPTED |
Angle X
|
Please note the reference axis. |
ACCEPTED |
Angle Y
|
Please note the reference axis. |
ACCEPTED |
Area
|
Area of a measurement location |
ACCEPTED |
Area, basal
|
Basal area is the area of a given section of land that is occupied by the cross-section of tree trunks and stems at the base. The term is used in forest management and forest ecology. |
ACCEPTED |
Aspect
|
Aspect identifies the downslope direction of the maximum rate of change in value from each raster DEM cell to its neighbors. |
ACCEPTED |
Atmospheric pressure
|
The pressure exerted by the weight of the air in the Earth's atmosphere. |
ACCEPTED |
Azimuth
|
The length of the arc of the horizon (in degrees) intercepted between a given point and a reference direction, usually north, and measured clockwise from the reference direction. |
ACCEPTED |
Baseflow
|
The portion of streamflow (discharge) that is supplied by groundwater sources. |
ACCEPTED |
Base saturation
|
Percent base saturation (BS) is the percentage of the Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC) occupied by the basic cations Ca2+, Mg2+ and K+. |
ACCEPTED |
Battery temperature
|
The battery temperature of a datalogger or sensing system |
ACCEPTED |
Bedrock type
|
In geology, bedrock is the lithified rock that lies under a loose softer material called regolith at the surface of the Earth or other terrestrial planets. |
ACCEPTED |
Benthos
|
Benthic species |
ACCEPTED |
Biomass
|
Mass of living biological organisms in a given area or ecosystem at a given time. If this generic term is used, the publisher should specify/qualify the species, class, etc. being measured in the method, qualifier, or other appropriate field. |
ACCEPTED |
Biomass, above-ground
|
The biomass is the mass of living biological organisms in a given area or ecosystem at a given time on or above the surface of the ground |
ACCEPTED |
Biomass, microbial
|
Microbial biomass (bacteria and fungi) is a measure of the mass of the living component of soil organic matter. |
ACCEPTED |
Biomass, phytoplankton
|
Total mass of phytoplankton, per unit area or volume |
ACCEPTED |
Biomass, soil bacterial deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
|
Total dry mass of soil bacterial deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) per unit mass of soil |
ACCEPTED |
Biomass, total
|
Total biomass |
ACCEPTED |
Biomass, vegetation
|
Total dry mass of plant material per unit area or volume |
ACCEPTED |
Blue-green algae (cyanobacteria), phycocyanin
|
Blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) with phycocyanin pigments |
ACCEPTED |
Borehole log material classification
|
Classification of material encountered by a driller at various depths during the drilling of a well and recorded in the borehole log. |
ACCEPTED |
Brightness temperature
|
The brightness temperature of a body is the temperature of a black body which radiates the same power per unit solid angle per unit area. |
ACCEPTED |
Bulk density
|
The mass of many particles of the material divided by the total volume they occupy. The total volume includes particle volume, inter-particle void volume and internal pore volume. |
ACCEPTED |
Bulk electrical conductivity
|
Bulk electrical conductivity of a medium measured using a sensor such as time domain reflectometry (TDR), as a raw sensor response in the measurement of a quantity like soil moisture. |
ACCEPTED |
Canopy closure
|
Crown closure is a term used in forestry. Crown closure and crown cover are two slightly different measures of the forest canopy and that determine the amount of light able to penetrate to the forest floor. |
ACCEPTED |
Canopy height
|
Forest canopy density and height are used as variables in a number of environmental applications, such as biomass estimation, vegetation coverage, and biodiversity determination. Canopy density, or canopy cover, is the ratio of vegetation to ground as seen from the air. Canopy height measures how far above the ground the top of the canopy is. Lidar can be used to determine both of these variables. |
ACCEPTED |
Carbon dioxide storage flux
|
Carbon dioxide (CO2) storage flux |
ACCEPTED |
Carrier to noise ratio
|
The carrier-to-noise ratio is defined as the ratio of the received modulated carrier signal power C to the received noise power N |
ACCEPTED |
Cell pressure
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Cell temperature
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Circumference
|
In geometry, the circumference (from Latin circumferens, meaning "carrying around") of a circle is the (linear) distance around it. That is, the circumference would be the length of the circle if it were opened up and straightened out to a line segment. Since a circle is the edge (boundary) of a disk, circumference is a special case of perimeter. The perimeter is the length around any closed figure and is the term used for most figures excepting the circle and some circular-like figures such as ellipses. Informally, "circumference" may also refer to the edge itself rather than to the length of the edge. |
ACCEPTED |
Clay
|
USDA particle size distribution category. Less then 0.002 mm diameter fine earth particles.
|
ACCEPTED |
Cloud area fraction
|
- |
PENDING |
Cloud base altitude
|
Cloud_base refers to the base of the lowest cloud. Altitude is the (geometric) height above the geoid, which is the reference geopotential surface. The geoid is similar to mean sea level. |
ACCEPTED |
Cloud cover
|
Cloud cover (also known as cloudiness, cloudage, or cloud amount) refers to the fraction of the sky obscured by clouds when observed from a particular location. |
ACCEPTED |
Cloud Cover oder Cloud Cover Factor oder Cloudiness oder Cloudage
|
- |
REJECTED |
COD filtrated
|
COD = Chemical Oxygen Demand |
ACCEPTED |
COD unfiltrated
|
COD = Chemical Oxygen Demand |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration Ca
|
Concentration Calcium |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration CH4
|
Concentration Methane |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration chlorophyll
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration Cl
|
Concentration Chloride |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration CO
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration CO2
|
Concentration Carbon Dioxide |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration CO2
|
Concentration Carbon Dioxide |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration CO2
|
Concentration Carbon Dioxide |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration H2O
|
Concentration Water Vapor |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration K
|
Concentration Potassium |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration Mg
|
Concentration Magnesium |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration NH4
|
Concentration Ammonium |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration NH4-N
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration NO2
|
Concentration Nitrite |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration NO2
|
Concentration Nitrite |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration NO2-N
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration NO3
|
Concentration Nitrate |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration NO3-N
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration O2
|
Concentration Oxygen |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration Pb
|
- |
REJECTED |
Concentration PO4
|
Concentration Orthophosphate |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration PO4-P
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration SO4
|
Concentration Sulfate |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration sulfur dioxide
|
Sulfur dioxide (SO2) |
ACCEPTED |
Concentration sulfur dioxide
|
Sulfur dioxide (SO2) |
ACCEPTED |
Conductivity in-situ
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Container number
|
The identifying number for a water sampler container. |
ACCEPTED |
Count, areal
|
Counts per area |
ACCEPTED |
Counter
|
The total number of events within the measurement period |
ACCEPTED |
Counts
|
Count value (e.g. for impulses). |
ACCEPTED |
Course
|
In navigation, the course of a watercraft or aircraft is the cardinal direction in which the craft is to be steered. |
ACCEPTED |
CPU usage
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Current velocity
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Curvature
|
Curvature of a DEM measures the shape or curvature of the slope. A part of a surface can be concave or convex; you can tell that by looking at the curvature value. The curvature is calculated by computing the second derivative of the surface. |
ACCEPTED |
Data transfer rate
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Date
|
Ideally datetime format according to ISO 8601 (yyyy=year, mm=month, dd=day). |
ACCEPTED |
Datetime
|
Ideally datetime format according to ISO 8601 (yyyy=year, mm=month, dd=day, HH=hour, MM=minute, SS=second). Alternatively JD (Julian Date). |
ACCEPTED |
Density altitude
|
The pressure altitude corrected for temperature deviations from the standard atmosphere.
Density altitude bears the same relation to pressure altitude as true altitude does to indicated altitude. |
ACCEPTED |
Depth
|
The perpendicular measurement downward from a surface |
ACCEPTED |
Depth, snow
|
Depth of snow |
ACCEPTED |
Depth, soil
|
Depth of soil |
ACCEPTED |
Depth to water table
|
- |
ACCEPTED |
Depth, unsaturated zone
|
Depth of the Unsaturated zone. The vadose zone, also termed the unsaturated zone, is the part of Earth between the land surface and the top of the phreatic zone, the position at which the groundwater (the water in the soil's pores) is at atmospheric pressure ("vadose" is from the Latin for "shallow"). Hence, the vadose zone extends from the top of the ground surface to the water table. |
ACCEPTED |
Diameter
|
A diameter of a circle is any straight line segment that passes through the center of the circle and whose endpoints lie on the circle. It can also be defined as the longest chord of the circle. Both definitions are also valid for the diameter of a sphere. In more modern usage, the length of a diameter is also called the diameter. In this sense one speaks of the diameter rather than a diameter (which refers to the line itself), because all diameters of a circle or sphere have the same length, this being twice the radius r. |
ACCEPTED |