
Which human activities add to atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide
(CO2), the greenhouse gas that may promote warming of the earth's climate?
How would CO2 emission restrictions change the use of fossil fuels?
How
would increases in atmospheric CO2 likely affect climate?
Can we see any
evidence that the world is getting warmer?
What coastal-zone areas are more
sensitive to potential sea-level rise from an accelerated melting of glaciers?
What is El Niño and how does it affect the earth's climate?
Fred Stoss studies a poster showing the endangered earth. The dark areas on the
land represent forest and vegetation, and the light areas represent desert.
These are among the thousands of questions to which ORNL data analysts respond every year. Recently, the topic of global environmental change, including climate change, has grown in importance. At ORNL we have improved our understanding of the science underlying this major environmental issue. At the same time the Laboratory is playing a pivotal role in directing the data and information management activities for what some researchers consider the most information-intensive science project ever undertaken.
Long one of the world's leading energy R&D facilities, ORNL has more recently emerged as one of the preeminent environmental research centers in the world. Within ORNL's Environmental Sciences Division, the Environmental Information Analysis Program was established to serve as a focal point for the assimilation of data related to global environmental change. The three major components of the program are the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Archive, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA's) Earth Observing System Data and Information System Distributed Active Archive Center, and the Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDIAC). The World Data Center-A for Atmospheric Trace Gases is located in CDIAC.

Scientific success in understanding global environmental change depends on integration and management of numerous data sources, extensive data holdings, and a number of data products. Achieving true success in this endeavor requires an information system that stimulates and enables cooperation among many researchers, empowering them to contribute to the overall effort. The U.S. Global Change Data and Information System (GCDIS) provides for the management of data, the sharing and harvesting of information, the dissemination of ideas, and the establishment of a widespread community of collaborators. Both the Department of Energy (DOE) and ORNL participate in the GCDIS.
Under this program, DOE's GCRP aims to
An information program in the DOE GCRP serves as a scientific interface through which technical information can be obtained, evaluated, quality-assured, and distributed. Such attention to these data and information requirements fosters a greater exchange of information across disciplines and reduces the uncertainties with which decisions are made.
Information programs established at ORNL help DOE meet those objectives. As data are acquired or data products generated, they are made available to the research community, policymakers, educators, and the general interested public. Most data represent a significant investment of public support for research, and holding these data is a public trust.
ORNL was designated in 1993 as NASA's archive center for biogeochemical dynamics. This center gathers, performs quality-assurance checks on, documents, archives, and distributes data and data products in support of NASA's field projects and other global change research and policy-making efforts. Biogeochemical research, as it relates to ecological modeling and global change, has been a long and fruitful pursuit of staff at ORNL. The establishment of the DAAC at ORNL enhances the abilities of researchers at ORNL and other research centers worldwide to study further the dynamics of critical biogeochemical cycles in support of the U.S. GCRP.

Achieving this goal entails measuring radiative fluxes, temperature, atmospheric composition, and wind velocity at five highly instrumented sites worldwide. These sites constitute the Cloud and Radiation Testbed (CART). Each site covers a geographic extent of 200 km on a sideabout the current size of a grid cell in a general circulation model. It is estimated that each site will produce as many as 3 gigabytes of observation data per day.
Each site has a variety of instruments capable of measuring the radiative spectrum from near infrared through microwave frequencies. Such instruments vary in their tasks from scanning the radiative spectrum with a very narrow window to measuring total irradiance (direct and diffuse). Each site also has an extensive capability of characterizing the physical dynamic structure of the atmosphere column directly above. These capabilities range from simple meteorological measurements, such as surface temperature, relative humidity, and wind speed, to more complex vertical and horizontal wind profiles and vertical profiles of the amount and species of water in the column over each site. Finally, image data on clouds will be provided by CART instruments on the earth's surface and instruments aboard observational satellites orbiting the earth.
The computing facility at each site gathers data from CART instruments. The data are transferred to the ARM Archive at ORNL. The ARM Archive provides the scientific community with the data taken from the sites, data developed from the merger of site data with information describing the quality-assurance checks, and contextual information. The ARM Archive can be accessed in a number of ways, and the data can be provided to users through a number of physical and electronic media.
When the Carbon Dioxide Information Center (CDIC) began in 1982 (the name was changed in 1986 to the Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center), greenhouse warming was a topic still primarily in the research arena and the center's role was, for the most part, one of distributing data from researchers to researchers. By the 1990s, however, when greenhouse warming was the subject of front-page newspaper articles, newsmagazine cover stories, congressional attention, and international conferences, CDIC's roleand its user communityhad broadened considerably. The center has been fielding information requests from congressional staffers drafting or evaluating legislation; public-school students working on science fair projects; science reporters compiling data for stories; and researchers working in the applied, life, physical, political, and social sciences.

CDIAC's principal information products are its fully documented numeric
packages on which quality-assurance checks have been performed. Ready access to
landmark (benchmark) data sets provides researchers, policymakers,and
educators with information to increase the certainties(or decrease the
uncertainties) with which environmental decisions are proposed. Photograph
by Tom Cerniglio and Curtis Boles.
The primary focus of CDIAC is the production and distribution of numeric data packages and computer model packages. The center has produced more than 50 numeric packages, which have had quality-assurance checks and are documented databases on various global-change topics. These packages cover a wide variety of data, including long-term temperature and precipitation trends, changes in atmospheric and oceanic concentrations of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, distribution of ecosystem complexes, intensity and frequency of occurrence of storms, vulnerability of coastal regions to rising sea level, and effects of elevated carbon dioxide levels on plant growth. The center makes its data available in a variety of formats including hard copy and diskette. More recently, the center has initiated the delivery of its numeric data in other electronic formats including compact disc and on the Internet.


CDIAC was again given a high honor at its 1995 annual program review, when its DOE program manager, Bobbi Parra, presented each member of the CDIAC staff a Certificate of Achievement for "outstanding contributions in the collection, analysis, coordination, and dissemination of global change information, and specifically for the efforts being made in the electronic exchange of information." Certificates were signed by Martha A. Krebbs, director of DOE's Office of Energy Research.
To maintain its proactive position in global change information management activities, ORNL strives to keep informed about current research policy and information developments and needs at the international, national, and local levels. In addition to the exchange of data among researchers, ORNL has taken an active role in the networking of information among government agencies, industries, businesses, special libraries and information/data centers, academic institutions, nongovernmental organizations, and special and public interest groups. Maintaining close professional contacts with individuals and organizations, CDIAC's networking capabilities include the dissemination of research results, policy initiatives, and education developments; objective technical interpretations and discussions of the technical aspects and information management related to carbon dioxide and climate change; referrals to other individuals or organizations; and access to resources relevant to individuals' information needs.
ORNL's networking capabilities have been further enhanced by active
participation in the programs and organizational administration of professional
societies, associations, and interagency and intergovernmental panels and
working groups. Through these networking activities, ORNL can monitor the
information needs of the broad global-change community and develop specific
information products and services to help meet those needs.![]()
For more information contact:
Environmental Information Analysis Program
Paul Kanciruk, Program Manager
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
P.O. Box 2008, MS 6407
Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6407
Phone: (423) 574-7817
Fax: (423) 574-4665
E-mail: pkk@ornl.gov
EOSDIS Distributed Active Archive Center
Larry D. Voorhees, DAAC Manager
ORNL DAAC
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
P.O. Box 2008, MS 6407
Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6407
Phone: (423) 574-7309
Fax: (423) 574-4665
E-mail: ornldaac@ornl.gov
Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Archive
Paul T. Singley, Director, ARM Archive
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
P.O. Box 2008, MS 6407
Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6407
Phone: (423) 241-5914
Fax: (423) 574-4665
E-mail: sin@ornl.gov
Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center
Robert M. Cushman, Director, CDIAC
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
P.O. Box 2008, MS 6335
Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6335
Phone: (423) 574-0390
Fax: (423) 574-2232
E-mail: cdiac@ornl.gov
Thomas A. Boden, Director, WDC-A
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
P.O. Box 2008, MS 6335
Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6335
Phone: (423) 241-4842
Fax: (423) 574-2232
E-mail: tab@ornl.gov
Global Change Data and Research
CDIAC has recently assisted the U. S. Global Change Data and Information System by constructing the GCDIS Home Page for the World Wide Web.
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