‹ › ×

    FRED
    • Contact
    • GDPR policy
    • Imprint
    • About
    • Sign Up
    • Login
    • SEARCH
    • Search and find
    • Packages
    • Map
    • By Category ...
      • Study sites
      • Sampling sites
      • Parameters
      • Sampling types
      • Species groups
      • Current DOIs

    71 Krummes Luch bei Königs Wusterhausen OT Uckley

    Title
    Krummes Luch bei Königs Wusterhausen OT Uckley
    Period
    2008-03-14 till 2008-12-16
    Period length
    9 mons 2 days
    Sampling interval
    14 days
    Keywords
    moor
    Study site
    Krummes Luch bei Königs Wusterhausen OT Uckley
    Sampling types
    Oberflächenwasser-Moorabfluss
    Sampling sites
    Moorabfluss am Südrand des Krummen Luchs
    location
    52.335933, 13.731767
    location
    type
    wetland/ peatland/ fen
    state
    weakly drained
    code
    description
    Parameters

    chemistry:

    carbon DOC (dissolved organic carbon)
    name
    carbon DOC (dissolved organic carbon)
    description

    Dissolved organic carbon (DOC), sometimes known as dissolved organic material (DOM),[1] is a broad classification for organic molecules of varied origin and composition within aquatic systems. The "dissolved" fraction of organic carbon is an operational classification. Many researchers use the term "dissolved" for compounds below 0.45 micrometers, but 0.22 micrometers is also common, saving colloidal for higher concentrations. A practical definition of dissolved typically used in marine chemistry is all substances that pass through a GF/F filter. The recommended measure technique is the HTCO technique after filtration on precombusted glass fiber filters, typically GF/F filters.[2]

    Dissolved organic carbon in marine and freshwater systems is one of the greatest cycled reservoirs of organic matter on Earth, accounting for the same amount of carbon as the atmosphere and up to 20% of all organic carbon.[3] The source of dissolved organic carbon depends on the body of water. In general, organic carbon compounds are a result of decomposition processes from dead organic matter such as plants or marine organisms. When water originates from land areas with a high proportion of organic soils, these components can drain into rivers and lakes as dissolved organic carbon.

    Dissolved organic carbon is also extremely important in the transport of metals in aquatic systems. Metals form extremely strong complexes with dissolved organic carbon, enhancing metal solubility while also reducing metal bioavailability.

    (Wikipedia)

    synonyms
    dissolved organic material (DOM), non-purgeable organic carbon (NPOC)
    electrical conductivity
    name
    electrical conductivity
    synonyms
    elektrische Leitfähigkeit, Salinität, Salzgehalt, Konduktivität, cond
    nitrogen, ammonia-nitrogen
    name
    nitrogen, ammonia-nitrogen
    description

    NH4+-N

    synonyms
    NH4+-N, Ammonium, ammonia, NH4-N, NH4
    nitrogen, nitrate-nitrogen
    name
    nitrogen, nitrate-nitrogen
    synonyms
    NO3-N, NO3--N, nitrate, Nitrat
    nitrogen, total dissolved nitrogen
    name
    nitrogen, total dissolved nitrogen
    synonyms
    Stickstoff gelöst, gesamter gelöster Stickstoff, DN
    pH
    name
    pH
    phosphorus (soluble reactive phosphorus)
    name
    phosphorus (soluble reactive phosphorus)
    description

    IGB Methodendatenbank:

    http://intranet.igb-berlin.de/methodendetails/items/75.html

    synonyms
    anorganischer gelöster Phosphor, ortho-Phosphat-P, DRP, DIP, inorganic soluble phosphorus, phosphate-phosphorus
    phosphorus (total dissolved phosphorus)
    name
    phosphorus (total dissolved phosphorus)
    Contact
    Thomas Rossoll
    Licence for data
    All rights reserved. Please send a request to Thomas Rossoll if you like to use this data. Mind our data policy: IGB Data Policy

    Metadata files

    TitelUpload dateFiletypeLicenceActions
    General_MetadataKrummes_Luch_bei_Königs_Wusterhausen_OT_Uckley.xml18. Jan. 2021 02:02xmlODC-By Download
    General_MetadataKrummes_Luch_bei_Königs_Wusterhausen_OT_Uckley.eml18. Jan. 2021 02:02emlODC-By Download

    You are about to leaving FRED and visting a third party website. We are not responsible for the content or availability of linked sites.

    To remain on our site, click Cancel.

    Parsing data File

    Estimated Time:

    Why does it take so much time?

    While parsing a file, the database has to perform various tasks, some of them needs a lot of CPU and memory for larger files.

    • preprocessing: means automatic detection of headlines, table body, format values or csv-separators
    • copying: means read the file cell by cell and copy all elements to the database. During this format settings can be calculated (for example iso-time)
    • analyzing: check out for different data types (can be time, numeric or text)