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Bio-ORACLE ERDDAP
Easier access to scientific data |
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| Dataset Title: | Bio-Oracle TotalPhytoplankton [depthMax] SSP370 2020-2100.
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| Institution: | Bio-Oracle consortium: https://www.bio-oracle.org (Dataset ID: phyc_ssp370_2020_2100_depthmax) |
| Information: | Summary
| License
| FGDC
| ISO 19115
| Metadata
| Background
| Data Access Form
| Files
| Make a graph
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to display maps which are created on-the-fly by ERDDAP's
Web Map Server (WMS) version 1.3.0.
is an Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC)
and ISO (19128)
standard for "the
creation and display of registered and superimposed map-like views of information that come
simultaneously from multiple remote and heterogeneous sources."
See the
list
of datasets available via WMS at this ERDDAP installation.
and
uDig
.
To make a client work, you would install the software on your computer.
Then, you would enter the URL of the WMS service into the client.
For example, in ArcGIS (not yet fully working because it doesn't handle time!), use
In practice, we haven't found any WMS clients that properly handle dimensions
other than longitude and latitude (e.g., time), a feature which is specified by the WMS
specification and which is utilized by most datasets in ERDDAP's WMS servers.
You may find that using
Make A Graph
and selecting the .kml file type (an OGC
standard) to load images into Google Earth
provides
a good (non-WMS) map client.
See the
list
of datasets with Make A Graph at this ERDDAP installation.
, which is a very versatile WMS client.
Leaflet doesn't automatically deal with dimensions other than longitude and latitude
(e.g., time), so you will have to write JavaScript (or other scripting code) to do that.
(Adventurous JavaScript programmers can look at the Souce Code for this web page.)
Another commonly used JavaScript WMS client is
OpenLayers
.
In practice, it is easier, more versatile, and more efficient to use this dataset's Make A Graph web page than to use WMS for this purpose. See the list of datasets with Make A Graph at this ERDDAP installation.