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Konferenzbeitrag

Connecting the Long Tail: sharing and describing heterogeneous data via common metadata standards

Urheber*innen

Lange,  Otto
External Organizations;

Samshuijzen,  Laurens
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/kelger

Elger,  Kirsten
5.1 Library and Information Services, 5.0 Geoinformation, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

/persons/resource/sfrenzel

Frenzel,  Simone
5.1 Library and Information Services, 5.0 Geoinformation, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

Pijnenburg,  Ronald
External Organizations;

Wessels,  Richard
External Organizations;

ter Maat,  Geertje
External Organizations;

Drury,  Martyn
External Organizations;

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Zitation

Lange, O., Samshuijzen, L., Elger, K., Frenzel, S., Pijnenburg, R., Wessels, R., ter Maat, G., Drury, M. (2023): Connecting the Long Tail: sharing and describing heterogeneous data via common metadata standards - Abstracts, EGU General Assembly 2023 (Vienna, Austria 2023).
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-13473


Zitierlink: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5016998
Zusammenfassung
The EPOS Multi-scale Laboratories (MSL) community includes a wide range of world-class solid Earth science laboratory infrastructures and as such it provides a multidisciplinary- and coherent platform for both virtual access to data and physical access to sophisticated research equipment. The MSL laboratories provide facilities for highly-specialized experimental research that results in experimental and analytical data underlying publications about phenomena ranging from the molecular to the continental scale. From the perspective of the intended FAIRness of these laboratory data, the challenge for the MSL community has been to develop a data management paradigm that on one hand acknowledges the uniqueness of many of the data collections involved, and on the other hand maximizes their findability through metadata dissemination via common standards into larger cross-disciplinary communities. Furthermore, besides provenance information about the data themselves, harmonized information about research groups and experimental assets must be considered as increasingly important for feeding the network relations that may help in making sense of scientific impact. As part of the MSL Data Publication Chain, the MSL community has developed a standardised workflow that allows easy metadata exchange based on common formats (e.g., flavors of DCAT-AP, DataCite 4.x, and ISO19115), whereas at the same time it integrates dedicated ontologies to give access to the richness of specialized terminology with respect to the MSL subdomains (e.g., analogue modelling, paleomagnetism, rock physics, geochemistry). Community developed controlled vocabularies act as the binding agent between data, equipment, and the experiment itself, while at the same time processing tools like a user-friendly metadata editor and a CKAN-based MSL data publication portal provide the building blocks for the chain towards cross-disciplinary sustainable dissemination. We will demonstrate how the MSL data management paradigm exploits both the strength of controlled terminology and the availability of good agnostic common standards in an approach for managing heterogeneous data coming from long tail communities.