European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2010

05/02/2010 - 00:00
05/07/2010 - 00:00
Covering all disciplines of the Earth, Planetary and Space Sciences

From EGU 2010 website:

The EGU General Assembly 2010 will bring together geoscientists from all over the world into one meeting covering all disciplines of the Earth, Planetary and Space Sciences. Especially for young scientists the EGU appeals to provide a forum to present their work and discuss their ideas with experts in all fields of geosciences.

Please note, deadline for abstract submission for oral and poster presentations is 18 January, 2010. Consult the Session Programme for the detailed list of sessions.

Information about ESSI9 Session: Data, Metadata and Mark-Up languages:

Earth systems science is fundamentally cross-disciplinary, and increasingly this requires sharing and exchange of data across discipline boundaries. Significant difficulties arise through differences in exchange formats, lack of agreed semantics, divergent access mechanisms, etc.

However, recent developments in distributed, service-oriented, information systems are leading to rapid advances in data interoperability. Adoption of common architectural approaches supported by web-based (W3C, OASIS, ISO, OGC) standards provides an opportunity to greatly simplify the task of discovering, evaluating, and accessing Earth science data as needed.

In particular, standardised conceptual models and encodings are being developed in many areas for data representation and exchange. They often represent agreement within communities of practice around common vocabularies, information classes, data relationships, and metadata profiles.

This session aims to present and discuss relevant topics and open issues dealing with data and metadata models and encoding (markup) languages for the Earth and space sciences. These include, but are not limited to:

  1. data and metadata schemas for the Earth and space sciences
  2. mark-up languages
  3. conceptual models for scientific data types
  4. ISO coverages and features as different views of data
  5. multi-dimensional data modeling
  6. observations and measurement models and schemas
  7. harmonization of data and metadata models between the geospatial, and Earth and space science communities
  8. integrating binary formats with conceptual schemas and mark-up languages
  9. multilingualism
  10. data and metadata granularity
  11. discovery, evaluation and use metadata
  12. exposing data models through web-based services
Event Location: 
Austria: Vienna
Contact Name: 
Andrew Woolf
Contact Phone: 
+44 (0)1235 778027
Contact Email: 
andrew.woolf@stfc.ac.uk