Geophysics - Geomagnetics

Maintenance and Update Frequency: unknown Statement: Digital geomagnetic data was first collected by GA in 1979. Before that time, Australian geomagnetic data had been collected in analog form (primarily on photographic paper), beginning with the establishment of the first geomagnetic observatory in...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) (distributor), Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) (owner), Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) (pointOfContact), Crosthwaite, P. (author), Hitchman, A.P. (author), Jones, B. (author), Lewis, A. (author), MNHD (hasAssociationWith), Manager Client Services (custodian), U36393 (custodian), Wang, L. (author)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Geoscience Australia
Subjects:
AU
Online Access:https://researchdata.edu.au/geophysics-geomagnetics/1273471
https://pid.geoscience.gov.au/dataset/ga/74509
https://doi.org/10.26186/5c6a2d207717f
Description
Summary:Maintenance and Update Frequency: unknown Statement: Digital geomagnetic data was first collected by GA in 1979. Before that time, Australian geomagnetic data had been collected in analog form (primarily on photographic paper), beginning with the establishment of the first geomagnetic observatory in Hobart in 1840. In some instances, pre-1979 analog records have been digitised; the earliest data in the dataset being from 1/1/1924. However, in most cases the analog records remain undigitised. Since 1979, existing observatories have been converted to digital operation and additional observatories have been added to the network. GA's geomagnetic observatory network currently stands at 10 observatories in Australia and Antarctica. Data are being added to the dataset in near real-time. Calibrated time-series data are acquired from Geoscience Australia's geomagnetic observatory network in Australia and Antarctica. Indices of geomagnetic activity are derived from these time series. These primary and derived data are provided to international data centres and agencies, space weather analysts, the resource exploration sector, and research institutions. They are used in navigation, magnetic-field modelling, resource exploration and exploitation, space weather monitoring and geoscience research.