Data

Sensor Relay Pole RP2 installed at One Tree Island as part of the Facility for the Automated Intelligent Monitoring of Marine Systems - FAIMMS

data.gov.au
Australian Institute of Marine Science (Owned by)
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=http://data.gov.au/dataset/8a2ac588-64b5-4d96-a1f6-5745c9450ca1&rft.title=Sensor Relay Pole RP2 installed at One Tree Island as part of the Facility for the Automated Intelligent Monitoring of Marine Systems - FAIMMS&rft.identifier=sensor-relay-pole-rp2-installed-at-one-tree-island-as-part-of-the-facility-for-the-automated-in&rft.publisher=data.gov.au&rft.description=Point of truth URL of this metadata record - A 6m steel pole has been installed within a small bommie within Second Lagoon of One Tree Island as part of the sensor network infrastructure at One Tree Island in the southern Great Barrier Reef off Gladstone, Australia. \n\nThe sensor-relay pole provides a platform for the installation of sensors to measure and monitor water conditions within the lagoon of One Tree Island. The pole has real time communications using 900MHz spread spectrum radio back to a base station on One Tree Island. \n\nThe pole is initially configured with a single thermistor string with six thermistors that is located down the outer wall of the bommie into the second lagoon and so provides a temperature profile of the second lagoon of One Tree Island. The data is collected every 10 minutes and relayed via the base station to the Data Centre at the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS).\n\nThe system uses a Campbell Scientific logger into which the sensors are connected. The equipment is serviced every six months with plans to install additional instruments such as pressure and salinity. The pole is available for mounting of additional third part instruments and so forms an infrastructure to support future observational work at the Island.&rft.creator=Australian Institute of Marine Science&rft.date=2023&rft.coverage=152.063996,-23.500443&rft.coverage=152.063996,-23.500443&rft.coverage=true&rft_rights=Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Australia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/au/&rft_subject=Buoys&rft_subject=CTD (Conductivity-Temperature-Depth Profilers)&rft_subject=Coastal Processes&rft_subject=Conductivity&rft_subject=Coral Reefs&rft_subject=Data Loggers&rft_subject=EARTH SCIENCES&rft_subject=ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY&rft_subject=Marine Engineering&rft_subject=Maritime Engineering&rft_subject=Moored Buoys&rft_subject=Ocean Temperature&rft_subject=Ocean Winds&rft_subject=Oceanography&rft_subject=Oceans&rft_subject=Physical Oceanography&rft_subject=Salinity/Density&rft_subject=Surface Winds&rft_subject=Thermistors&rft_subject=Water Temperature&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Australia
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Brief description

A 6m steel pole has been installed within a small bommie within Second Lagoon of One Tree Island as part of the sensor network infrastructure at One Tree Island in the southern Great Barrier Reef off Gladstone, Australia. \n\nThe sensor-relay pole provides a platform for the installation of sensors to measure and monitor water conditions within the lagoon of One Tree Island. The pole has real time communications using 900MHz spread spectrum radio back to a base station on One Tree Island. \n\nThe pole is initially configured with a single thermistor string with six thermistors that is located down the outer wall of the bommie into the second lagoon and so provides a temperature profile of the second lagoon of One Tree Island. The data is collected every 10 minutes and relayed via the base station to the Data Centre at the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS).\n\nThe system uses a Campbell Scientific logger into which the sensors are connected. The equipment is serviced every six months with plans to install additional instruments such as pressure and salinity. The pole is available for mounting of additional third part instruments and so forms an infrastructure to support future observational work at the Island.

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152.064,-23.50044

152.063996,-23.500443

152.064,-23.50044

152.063996,-23.500443

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