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Replication data for: Cold Seeps and Coral Reefs in Northern Norway: carbon cycling in marine ecosystems with coexisting features
This dataset contains water column measurements, dissolved organic matter compositions, hydrographical profiles and 16S rRNA data collected from the Lofoten-Vesteralen seep site at Northern Norway. Data are presented along with the R codes for the replication of analyses, and figures that were added in our submitted paper.
We recommend using R (v4.3.1) and R Studio (2023.06.1) which can access all codes and data. Running codes in the given order will create corresponding data tables and all the figures that were used in the article.Cold seeps and cold-water corals (CWCs) coexist on Northern Norway’s continental shelf at the Hola trough between Lofoten and Vesterålen. Here, cold seeps release methane from the seabed, yet none reaches the sea-surafce. Instead, the methane dissolves and disperses in the ocean where it is ultimately consumed by methane-oxidizing microorganisms. These microorganisms metabolize methane and release carbon dioxide and dissolved organic matter (DOM), which impact the biogeochemical habitat of CWCs in close vicinity of cold seeps. We investigated the biogeochemistry of carbon, carbon isotopes, nutrients, dissolved organic matter compositions, and microbial diversity in the water column. Our results indicated that dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations were 29% higher near cold seeps with modified carbon's isotopic compositions. The hydrophysical parameters and surface-to-bottom control of sinking particles mainly govern water column productivity and nutrient cycle. DOM compositions implied that the seep-associated microbiomes modify DOM's chemical diversity and isotopic composition at CWCs and the entire water column near cold seeps.
We suggest cold seeps and CWCs coexist in Northern Norway's continental shelves; however, enhanced water temperatures and consequent increase in methane release at cold seeps may mitigate the ecological role and functioning of CWC reefs in the future
GNSS Scintillation Data (60 s) at Longyearbyen in 2024
This data set contains phase and amplitude scintillation data at 60 seconds time resolution at Kjell Henriksen Observatory (KHO) at Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
The measurements were collected by the University of Bergen using a NovAtel GPStation-6 global navigation satellite system receiver. The measurements include signals from GPS, GLONASS, and GALILEO at different frequencies. These data are used for research on space weather disturbances in the polar ionosphere.
A detailed description of the data structure and format is gathered in the documentation data set: Oksavik, Kjellmar, 2020, "Documentation of GNSS Total Electron Content and Scintillation Data (60 s) at Svalbard", DataverseNO, https://doi.org/10.18710/EA5BYX
This data set is part of a larger collection: Oksavik, Kjellmar, 2020. "The University of Bergen Global Navigation Satellite System Data Collection". DataverseNO. https://doi.org/10.18710/AJ4S-X394.
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Replication Data for: "Vortex structures under dimples and scars in turbulent free-surface flows" (PART 4/4)
This data archive (along with parts 1-3) contains simulation data for direct numerical simulations of isotropic turbulence interacting with a free surface, for different Reynolds numbers and Weber numbers.
The data is generated by computing time evolution of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations and continuity equation on a three-dimensional domain, which is periodic in horizontal directions, restricted from above by a deformable free surface (resolved by the kinematic and dynamic boundary conditions on a surface-adhering grid) and below by a free-slip boundary. Turbulence is generated by linear forcing in the centre of the domain.
For more detail on the simulations, parameters and flow problem, see the research article "Vortex structures under dimples and scars in turbulent free-surface flows", by Aarnes, JR, Babiker, O, Xuan, A, Shen, Lian, and Ellingsen, SA, in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics (2025).
The data archive is split over four different repositories (case details in Aarnes et al., 2025).):
Part 1: Data for case 1, Re = 2500, We = infinity. (doi.org/10.18710/XQ81WH)
Part 2: Data for case 2, Re = 2500, We = 20. (doi.org/10.18710/MBK9JF)
Part 3: Data for case 3, Re = 2500, We = 10. (doi.org/10.18710/PN7DZA)
Part 4: Data for cases 4-6, Re = 1000, We = infinity, 20, 10. (doi.org/10.18710/UAT043)
Each archive also contains the same readme file with instruction on how to get started and a data loader script which can read the binary files which the .tar-files contain. Due to storage limitations, only data for the upper part of the flow is included in this data archive. The thickness of the upper part is two times the viscous boundary layer. Moreover, the data is limited to approximately half of each time series, also to limit the storage requirement. (2025-01-10
Replication Data for: Quantifying large carnivore predation relative to human harvest on moose in an intensively managed boreal ecosystem
This dataset contains the data and the code used to calculate moose density inside wolf territories and relates to the article entitled "Quantifying large carnivore predation on moose relative to human harvest in an intensively managed boreal ecosystem" and published in Ecological Applications in 2025
Replication Data for: Biological N2-fixation and grain yield of pigeon pea: The role of biochar and conservation agriculture in low-input systems
This dataset contains original research data from Mubende (central Uganda), Alebtong and Gulu (Northern Uganda), for two growing seasons in 2022 and 2023. We investigated the effect of biochar and conservation agriculture on nitrogen derived from the atmosphere (Ndfa%), biological N2-fixation, biomass, grain yield, and soil parameters
Replication Data and Code for: Exploring sustainable development interactions through the lens of renewable energy consumption
The contents of this dataset is the basis of the analysis conducted in the related publication. The scope of the study was to investigate the relationship between renewable energy consumption and the state of sustainable development across countries. The investigation was facilitated by clustering countries according to their sustainable development metrics, and correlations between the sustainable development indicator gaps for each country and their renewable energy shares
Replication Data for article "An experimental assessment of biomass loss due to red deer grazing on agricultural grass meadows in Norway."
R script and data for analyses in relation to the article "An experimental assessment of biomass loss due to red deer grazing on agricultural grass meadows in Norway
Replication Data for: Intensification strategies in English-Spanish bilingual speech: Examining lexical and morphological markers in Miami bilinguals’ discourse
Dataset abstract
This dataset contains the three data files that the related publication is based on. In total, they contain 3000+ tokens of intensifying constructions. These constructions were extracted from the Miami Corpus, the Santa Barbara Corpus (specifically a subsample of the corpus containing all conversations involving non-Hispanic speakers from southern U.S. states) and the Havana subcorpus of Ameresco. They are coded for extralinguistic variables relating to the speaker and hearer and intralinguistic variables relating to the linguistic properties of both the base and the intensifier of the intensifying construction.Article abstract
This paper investigates the speech variety of the English-Spanish community of Miami, which features a high degree of English-Spanish bilingualism. Specifically, it explores intensification, a site of analytic-synthetic conflict between English and Spanish grammars. English predominantly uses lexical-analytic strategies (e.g. very beautiful, a big house) for intensification, whereas Spanish employs more morphological-synthetic markers (e.g. guapísimo ‘very beautiful’, un casón ‘a big house’). Concretely, the current study aims to investigate whether Miami bilinguals have preferences in terms of the language or strategy of choice to express intensification and whether these preferences are influenced by intralinguistic (e.g. semantic-pragmatic function of the intensifier) or extralinguistic factors (e.g. speakers’ proficiency in, acquisition of and attitudes toward both languages). To this end, an empirical study is conducted on three corpora, one bilingual and two monolingual ones. In this study, a wide variety of both analytic and synthetic intensifiers is found. The qualitative and quantitative findings reveal that Miami bilinguals use more English than Spanish intensifiers and favor analytic intensifiers over synthetic ones. However, among the Spanish intensifiers, the proportion of synthetic forms is significantly higher than among the English intensifiers.</p
Data and materials for: The Role of Self-Efficacy and Social Belonging in Norwegian Upper Secondary Students’ Interest in Gendered Occupations
This data set is part of a study investigating how self-efficacy and expected social affiliation influence Norwegian upper secondary school students' interest in gender-dominated and gender-balanced occupations. In a survey, self-efficacy, expected social affiliation, career interest and descriptive and prescriptive gender stereotypes were collected for 12 occupations with brief descriptions.
The dataset was collected from 210 students in the first year of upper secondary education for general studies (year 11) by means of a questionnaire distributed and administered electronically via the survey portal nettskjema.no, which is developed and hosted by the University of Oslo ([email protected]). Data were collected anonymously from nine classes in seven different schools in central Norway between October 2022 and January 2023. All materials were presented to participants in Norwegian. An English translation of the questions and answer options is provided in the manuscript "The Role of Self-Efficacy and Social Belonging in Norwegian Upper Secondary Students’ Interest in Gendered Occupations".</p
Replication Data for: Hydroclimate intensification likely aided glacier survival on Svalbard in the Early Holocene
This dataset includes the results of analyses presented in the study "Hydroclimate intensification likely aided glacier survival on Svalbard in the Early Holocene" by Auer et al. 2025. The study presents evidence of glacier survival on Svalbard during the warmer-than-present Holocene Thermal Maximum (HTM). The analyses were performed on sedimentary records from two lakes (Berglivatnet, Lakssjøen) which receive meltwater from the Åsgardfonna ice cap.The cores were extracted in the summer of 2021 using a Nesje corer (piston cores) and a UWITEC gravity coring system. Chronological data shows they cover ~14 ka.
The data are organized per paper figure per .txt file and include magnetic susceptibility, chronology, X-ray Fluorescence, Computed Tommography and grain size analysis. Additional details may be found in the appended readme file.</p