service
Type of resources
Available actions
Topics
Keywords
Contact for the resource
Provided by
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status
Service types
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Seismic area, some sort of business area
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API for oppslag av offisielle adresser i matrikkelen. Spørring skjer mot en distribusjonsdatabase av matrikkelen som normalt oppdateres daglig. Det er mulighet for å søke etter adresser tekstlig eller å søke etter adresser i nærheten til et punkt. Av kretsinformasjon på adresse er kun postkrets med (postnummer til vegadresser, - ikke postbokser). API-et er åpent og fritt tilgjengelig. API-et egner seg ikke for å hente ut komplette datasett. Hvis man ønsker å hente ned større datasett så anbefales det å laste ned filene som er tilgjengeliggjort via geonorge.no. Endringer ved API-et vil varsles på Geonorge Tjenestevarsler: https://www.geonorge.no/aktuelt/varsler/Tjenestevarsler/
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The dataset originates from 10 years' average values of sea temperature in the surface, the water masses (intervals for 5m, 15m, 30m, 50m, 100m, 150m, 200m and 250m), as well as at the seabed. The distance from the seabed with the current model setup ranges from a few cm in shallow water and up to 1.5m when the total depth is 100m or more. The temperatures are given in degrees Celsius.
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The Frost API provides free access to MET Norway's archive of historical weather and climate data. This data includes quality controlled daily, monthly, and yearly measurements of temperature, precipitation, and wind data. Other information, like metadata about weather stations, is also available through the API.
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Catalog service (API) that enables searches for all datasets registered in the Geonorge catalog. The API follows the OGC standard (Catalog Service for the Web - CSW) and only returns metadata about datasets.
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Total Organic Carbon - content of organic carbon in surface sediments.
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The map service shows levels of heavy metals and other inorganic environmental indicators in surface sediments, as well as content of mud and TOC, which are important factors for binding and accumulation of heavy metals in the sediments. The term heavy metals includes all metallic elements that have a relatively high specific gravity. Heavy metals are natural constituents of the earth's crust and occur in varying concentrations in most natural materials. In addition, the content of microplastic particles in sediments is shown as one of the important environmental indicators.
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The WMS service shows the depth conditions in Norwegian sea areas as shadow relief with resolutions of 5 m, 25 m, 50 m. The data on the map is scale-dependent and more details are shown when one zooms into the map. If you zoom into the map, this will automatically take you to 50-meter resolution, then on to 25 meters and – if the data is detailed enough – down to a 5-meter resolution between depth points. There are 5 meter and 25 meter grids, but only outside the territory boundary (12 nautical miles) as data within the territorial boundary is classified by the Norwegian Armed Forces. The very few areas, which have been released by the Norwegian Armed Forces, are exempted from this. The shadow relief is derived mainly from regular grids (terrain models), which are based solely on modern multibeam surveys. The dataset has best coverage in the areas in Northern Norway where the Norwegian Mapping Authority Hydrographic Service and partners have carried out hydrographic surveys over the past few years. The dataset also has some coverage in Central Norway and will be extended as new hydrographic surveys are carried out and terrain models are produced for the seabed.
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The CORINE (Coordination of information on the environment) program was started by the European Environment Agency (EEA) in 1985. Land cover information was introduced with the CORINE land cover (CLC) dataset for reference year 1990. The CLC database has been updated three times (CLC2000, CLC2006 and CLC2012). CLC is now implemented in all EU countries, most of the Central and Eastern European countries, as well as in Norway and Iceland (EEA 2007). The same hierarchical (three levels) classification system for land cover is used throughout the whole Europe. The first level has five classes of land cover. The second level has 15 classes the third level has 44 classes of land cover. Working scale of CLC is 1: 100.000.The smallest mapping unit is 25 hectares. CLC datasets for Norway are produced by automatic generalization of existing high-resolution national land resource datasets supplemented with input from topographic maps and various public databases. The CORINE land cover maps are in general manually or semi -automatically digitized from satellite images. They reflect land use in years around 1990, 2000, 2006 and 2012. Further information can be found here: https://brage.bibsys.no/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11250/2469123/SoL-Rapport-2010-05.pdf? CLC2012 was compiled using the same method, but with CLC2006 as the basis.
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Names of Norwegian maritime areas