APPENDIX E
SUMMARY OF GCIP INITIAL DATA SETS COMPILED
A number of GCIP initial data sets (GIDS) were prepared to provide the data services support during the build-up period before the EOP. The GCIP researchers considered the availability of existing data sets from special experiments and/or reanalysis periods in selecting time periods for these initial data sets.
Preparation of the GIDS started in 1993, and the data sets were
compiled for on-line access by GCIP investigators to the extent that is technically feasible.
They were also packaged in a manner (e.g., use of CD-ROM) for wide distribution especially
to international persons interested in performing initial diagnostic, evaluation, and modeling
studies on GCIP-related topics.
E.1 GIDS-1 Winter-Early Spring Season
The first GCIP data set served as both a scientific data set and a GCIP
static data system test that made use of existing experimental and operational capability to
provide a composite observing and model output data set derived from the new observation
and assimilation schemes. The period for this data set is from 1 February to 30 April 1992.
This data set includes data from STORM-FEST, conducted from 1 February to 15 March
1992, and was augmented by hydrological, geographical, and vegetation data for the
Mississippi River basin. An additional six weeks of atmospheric, hydrological, and land
surface data were added from existing data centers.
The GIDS-1 data set became available online through the CODIAC
system operated by the UCAR/OFPS in April 1994. A CD-ROM containing a selected
portion of GIDS-1 data was distributed in August 1994. A summary report for this data set
was completed in September 1996.
E.2 GIDS-2 Abnormal Climate Events
The compilation of this data set was postponed due to lack of resources.
E.3 GIDS-3 Initial Warm Season
The observations and model output data collected during a GCIP
Integrated Systems Test (GIST), provided the third of the initial data sets. This data set was
completed in June 1995 and is available on line through the CODIAC system operated by the
UCAR/OFPS. A CD-ROM containing a selected portion of the GIDS-3 data was distributed
in October 1995. The data summary report was completed in September 1996.
The GIST data collection period extended from 1 April 1994 to 31
August 1994, with a concentrated effort during the summer season of June, July, and August.
The GIST took place in the LSA-SW which was shown in
Figure 7-1. A listing of the data
types to be included in the GIDS-3 data set is given in Table E-1.
Table E-1 Data Sets Collected During GIST |
Surface Data
Gist Hourly Surface Composite* |
Upper Air Data
NWS Upper Air Rawinsonde Data (MicroART 6-see diskettes) |
Satellite Data
GOES-7 Satellite Imagery (IR, Visible 6.7 pm) |
Radar Data
WSR-88D LEVEL II Data |
Model Data
AES/CMC RFE Model |
*Contains data from ASOS, AWOS, NCDC SAOs, HPCN, Oklahoma Mesonet, DOE/ARM CART, NWS Cooperate Observer, TRFC, USGS, USACE, and USDA
E.4 GIDS-4 Second Warm Season
The Enhanced Seasonal Observing Period of 1995 (ESOP-95) was
conducted from 1 April 1995 to 30 September 1995 to initiate the ongoing program of
observations in support of the LSA-SW focus and to concentrate the buildup in the six
months prior to the start of the EOP. The ESOP-95 data collection was done in cooperation
with the VORTEX II and a US Weather Research Program campaign labeled Weather
Analysis and Verification Experiment (WAVE) conducted in the first three months of the
ESOP-95 period.
The ESOP-95 provided the basis for the fourth initial data set (GIDS-4).
The GIDS-4 contains many of the same data types as was collected during GIST in 1994.
The data set was completed in Sepatember 1996 and the data summary report is in
preparation.
A listing ot the data types to be included in the GIDS-4 data set is
given in Table E-2.
Table E-2 Data Sets Contained in the GIDS-4 Database |
IN-SITU DATA |
Surface
GIDS-4 Hourly Surface Composite* |
Upper Air Data
NWS Upper Air Rawinsonde Data (6-sec vertical levels) |
Radar Data
WSR-88D LEVEL II Data |
Land Characterization Data Vegetation/Data Products |
SATELLITE DATA
GOES-8 Satellite Imagery (IR, Visible 6.7 pm) |
MODEL DATA
AES/CMC RFE Model |
E.5 GCIP Reference Data Set
The USGS supported the preparation of a CD-ROM containing a
number of different data sets which is expected to have wide use among GCIP investigators.
One of the major criteria for including a specific type of data on the CD-ROM was that the
data are expected to change little if any during the next two to three years. A CD-ROM
containing the GCIP Reference Data Set (GREDS) was published in August 1995. A
description of the data sets on this CD-ROM is included as part of the documentation for
each CD-ROM. The list of data sets for the GCIP Reference Data Sets CD-ROM is given in
Table E-3.
Table E-3 GCIP Reference Data Sets CD-ROM |
1. Two ASCII files of USGS, reservoir and NOAA meteorological sites plus
Canadian hydrometric and meteorological stations for the Mississippi River basin.
2. An ASCII file inventory of daily values for the USGS sites.
3. A 500-m Digital Elevation Model.
4. Geology of the conterminous United States, from 1:2,500,000-scale King and Beikman map.
5. Land use from 1:7,500,000-scale map of conterminous US.
6. River-Reach File, Version 1 (RF1). Data set derived from original EPA files, with
attributes, for the conterminous US.
7. Large Reservoirs of the US. (Hitt 1990).
Locations and selected characteristics of approximately 2,700 reservoirs and controlled
natural lakes that have normal capacities of at least 5,000 acre-feet or maximum
capacities of at least 25,000 acre-feet and that were completed as of January 1, 1988.
8. Average Annual Runoff. (Gebert et al. 1987).
This is an isoline map of average annual runoff in the conterminous United States, 1951-1980,
base scale 1:7,500,000.
9. Climatography of the US, No. 81 -- Supplement No. 3: Contour maps of Annual
1961-90 Normal Temperature, Precipitation, and Degree Days, from NCDC.
10. LANDSAT nominal row and path boundaries and center points. An index to LANDSAT scenes.
11. Grid node locations and complete descriptions of model parameters for the ETA
model. Projected to Lambert Azimuthal Equal Area, to match with the other data sets.
12. State and county boundaries from the 1:2,000,000 Digital Line Graph format.
13. Quadrangle index maps for USGS 1:250,000-, 1:100,000-, and 1:24,000-scale
quadrangle map series. Including quad name, states, index numbers needed for
ordering quad maps from USGS. Useful for determining list of quads needed for a
particular study area.
14. Hydrological units of the conterminous United States. Boundaries for the 8-digit
hydrological unit codes, digitized from 1:250,000-scale base map.
15. An ASCII listing of sites identified as having long-term records useful for climate
studies, including the USGS hydro-climatic data network
(Slack and Landwehr 1993).
16. Graphic interface format images of the above data sets for browsing. Each image
is 1024 x 768 pixels. 17. Software -- PC executable and C source code for Lambert Azimuthal Equal Area projection to Latitude/Longitude, and vice versa. FORTRAN source distribution (USGS version) for entire Global Coordinate Transformation Package (GCTP). |