From the Field to the Cloud: A Review of Three Approaches to Sharing Historical Data From Field Stations Using Principles From Data Science

Historical data play an important role in our understanding of environmental change and ecosystem dynamics. By lengthening the temporal scale of scientific inquiry, historical data reveal insights into the dynamic nature of ecosystems. However, most historical data has yet to make a full contributio...

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Main Authors: Kelly Easterday, Tim Paulson, Proxima DasMohapatra, Peter Alagona, Shane Feirer, Maggi Kelly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00088/full
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spelling doaj-a2ebddf156da4691bac1dec65f63b9672020-11-25T00:33:29ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Environmental Science2296-665X2018-10-01610.3389/fenvs.2018.00088398260From the Field to the Cloud: A Review of Three Approaches to Sharing Historical Data From Field Stations Using Principles From Data ScienceKelly Easterday0Tim Paulson1Proxima DasMohapatra2Peter Alagona3Shane Feirer4Maggi Kelly5Maggi Kelly6Environmental Science, Policy and Management Department, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United StatesDepartment of History, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, CanadaSchool of Information, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United StatesHistory, Geography, and Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United StatesStatewide Program in Informatics and GIS, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of California, Oakland, Oakland, CA, United StatesEnvironmental Science, Policy and Management Department, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United StatesStatewide Program in Informatics and GIS, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of California, Oakland, Oakland, CA, United StatesHistorical data play an important role in our understanding of environmental change and ecosystem dynamics. By lengthening the temporal scale of scientific inquiry, historical data reveal insights into the dynamic nature of ecosystems. However, most historical data has yet to make a full contribution, remaining “dark” and out of reach to the broader scientific community. This article responds to several calls stressing the importance of empirical historical materials and urges their preservation and accessibility. Despite the importance of historical data collections, few standards have emerged to integrate historical dark data into the larger digital data landscape. To encourage greater use of historical data across scientific disciplines it is vital to make data findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (e.g., the FAIR principles). In this paper we discuss the potential of historical dark data to contribute to the modern digital ecological data landscape. We do this by focusing on three cases from the University of California field and research stations and the groups that have worked to make historical dark data discoverable. Despite the common goal of maximizing the potential use of these data collections, each case and the methods employed are unique, and showcase varying levels of success in achieving the FAIR principles and shepherding historical data into the twenty-first century.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00088/fulldark datadata sciencehistorical datafield stationsopen data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kelly Easterday
Tim Paulson
Proxima DasMohapatra
Peter Alagona
Shane Feirer
Maggi Kelly
Maggi Kelly
spellingShingle Kelly Easterday
Tim Paulson
Proxima DasMohapatra
Peter Alagona
Shane Feirer
Maggi Kelly
Maggi Kelly
From the Field to the Cloud: A Review of Three Approaches to Sharing Historical Data From Field Stations Using Principles From Data Science
Frontiers in Environmental Science
dark data
data science
historical data
field stations
open data
author_facet Kelly Easterday
Tim Paulson
Proxima DasMohapatra
Peter Alagona
Shane Feirer
Maggi Kelly
Maggi Kelly
author_sort Kelly Easterday
title From the Field to the Cloud: A Review of Three Approaches to Sharing Historical Data From Field Stations Using Principles From Data Science
title_short From the Field to the Cloud: A Review of Three Approaches to Sharing Historical Data From Field Stations Using Principles From Data Science
title_full From the Field to the Cloud: A Review of Three Approaches to Sharing Historical Data From Field Stations Using Principles From Data Science
title_fullStr From the Field to the Cloud: A Review of Three Approaches to Sharing Historical Data From Field Stations Using Principles From Data Science
title_full_unstemmed From the Field to the Cloud: A Review of Three Approaches to Sharing Historical Data From Field Stations Using Principles From Data Science
title_sort from the field to the cloud: a review of three approaches to sharing historical data from field stations using principles from data science
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Environmental Science
issn 2296-665X
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Historical data play an important role in our understanding of environmental change and ecosystem dynamics. By lengthening the temporal scale of scientific inquiry, historical data reveal insights into the dynamic nature of ecosystems. However, most historical data has yet to make a full contribution, remaining “dark” and out of reach to the broader scientific community. This article responds to several calls stressing the importance of empirical historical materials and urges their preservation and accessibility. Despite the importance of historical data collections, few standards have emerged to integrate historical dark data into the larger digital data landscape. To encourage greater use of historical data across scientific disciplines it is vital to make data findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (e.g., the FAIR principles). In this paper we discuss the potential of historical dark data to contribute to the modern digital ecological data landscape. We do this by focusing on three cases from the University of California field and research stations and the groups that have worked to make historical dark data discoverable. Despite the common goal of maximizing the potential use of these data collections, each case and the methods employed are unique, and showcase varying levels of success in achieving the FAIR principles and shepherding historical data into the twenty-first century.
topic dark data
data science
historical data
field stations
open data
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00088/full
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