Biodiversity Information Science and Standards :
Conference Abstract
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Corresponding author: Rachel Walcott (r.walcott@nms.ac.uk)
Received: 28 Aug 2023 | Published: 29 Aug 2023
© 2023 Rachel Walcott, Kerstin Lehnert
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Walcott R, Lehnert K (2023) Reaching Further with Earth Science Data. Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 7: e111768. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.7.111768
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Earth Sciences cover a broad spectrum of research fields such as petrology, sedimentology, structural geology, seismology, and geomorphology, to name a few, which aim to understand interrelated processes on the surface and in the interior of our planet. Many of the research questions studied in the Earth sciences, such as, understanding past climates, the human impact on the Critical Zone*
The association of Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) with the Earth Science part of the Natural Sciences has, until recently, been largely limited to palaeontology, primarily due to its close affinity with biology. Standards have been developed that support the taxonomy of fossils and include terms for "deep time" intervals (chrono- and bio-stratigraphy) and "paleo-surface environment" (sedimentology). Other important and highly relevant fields such as mineralogy, geochemistry, meteoritics, and soil sciences have not been included or coordinated with so far. Although some progress is being made with the ongoing development of the Mineral Extension for Darwin Core and the inclusion of some geological terms in Latimer Core (
We will introduce the users, data systems, and community standards and best practices, including metadata, vocabularies, and persistent identifiers for data and samples being used and developed in the subdisciplines of the Earth Sciences mentioned above. We advocate for collaboration and coordination with these fields to make TDWG more inclusive, expand accessible resources, and provide an opportunity for TDWG to link to these other communities. Broader networking within an interdisciplinary research framework has the potential to address more fundamental and over-arching issues of both scientific and public relevance.
geology, Mineral Extension for Darwin Core, mineralogy, geochemistry, soil science
Rachel Walcott
TDWG 2023
"The Critical Zone" is Earth's outer skin, but often defined from bedrock to treetop. This is an environment where rock, soil, water, air, and living organisms interact and shape the Earth's surface." https://criticalzone.org. Accessed 22 August, 2023.