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Found 8 result(s)
Welcome to Smithsonian Open Access, where you can download, share, and reuse millions of the Smithsonian’s images—right now, without asking. With new platforms and tools, you have easier access to nearly 3 million 2D and 3D digital items from our collections—with many more to come. This includes images and data from across the Smithsonian’s 19 museums, nine research centers, libraries, archives, and the National Zoo.
The NBN Atlas is a collaborative project that aggregates biodiversity data from multiple sources and makes it available and usable online. It is the UK’s largest collection of freely available biodiversity data.
Country
Research Data Australia is the data discovery service of the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The ARDC is supported by the Australian Government through the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy Program. Research Data Australia helps you find, access, and reuse data for research from over one hundred Australian research organisations, government agencies, and cultural institutions. We do not store the data itself here but provide descriptions of, and links to, the data from our data publishing partners.
Country
RODBUK Cracow Open Research Data Repository is co-created by six Cracow universities: AGH University of Science and Technology, University of Physical Education in Krakow, Cracow University of Technology, Krakow University of Economics, Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Pedagogical University of Krakow. The purpose of RODBUK is to collect, develop, archive and make available in open access all types of research data created by researchers, PhD candidates and students in the course of scientific activity. RODBUK aims to implement the Open Science policy by creating a publicly available platform for depositing research datasets enabling: getting acquainted with the research conducted in Cracow's scientific centers, storage of various types of research data obtaining a permanent Digital Object Identifier (DOI) for each dataset, standardized data citation, choosing a data usage license agreement (Creative Commons or other. RODBUK allows to collect and share open research data from various disciplines and in all file formats. RODBUK applies the FAIR Principles, which means the data is findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable.
The NDEx Project provides an open-source framework where scientists and organizations can share, store, manipulate, and publish biological network knowledge. The NDEx Project maintains a free, public website; alternatively, users can also decide to run their own copies of the NDEx Server software in cases where the stored networks must be kept in a highly secure environment (such as for HIPAA compliance) or where high application load is incompatible with a shared public resource.
Country
DBT is the institutional repository of the FSU Jena, the TU Ilmenau and the University of Erfurt as well as members of the other Thuringian universities and colleges can publish scientific documents in the DBT. In individual cases, land users (via the ThULB Jena) can also archive documents in the DBT.
The Arctic Data Center is the primary data and software repository for the Arctic section of NSF Polar Programs. The Center helps the research community to reproducibly preserve and discover all products of NSF-funded research in the Arctic, including data, metadata, software, documents, and provenance that links these together. The repository is open to contributions from NSF Arctic investigators, and data are released under an open license (CC-BY, CC0, depending on the choice of the contributor). All science, engineering, and education research supported by the NSF Arctic research program are included, such as Natural Sciences (Geoscience, Earth Science, Oceanography, Ecology, Atmospheric Science, Biology, etc.) and Social Sciences (Archeology, Anthropology, Social Science, etc.). Key to the initiative is the partnership between NCEAS at UC Santa Barbara, DataONE, and NOAA’s NCEI, each of which bring critical capabilities to the Center. Infrastructure from the successful NSF-sponsored DataONE federation of data repositories enables data replication to NCEI, providing both offsite and institutional diversity that are critical to long term preservation.
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The ZBW Digital Long-Term Archive is a dark archive whose sole purpose is to guarantee the long term availability of the objects stored in it. The storage for the ZBW’s digital objects and their representation platforms is maintained by the ZBW division IT-Infrastructures and is not part of the tasks of the group Digital Preservation. The content that the ZBW provides is accessible via special representation platforms. The special representation platforms are: EconStor: an open access publication server for literature on business and economics. ZBW DIGITAL ARCHIVE: it contains born digital material from the domains of business and economics. The content of this archive is accessible in open access via EconBiz, the subject portal for business and economics of the ZBW. National and Alliance Licenses: the ZBW negotiates and curates licenses for electronic products on a national level. This is processed under the framework of the German Research Foundation as well as the Alliance of Science Associations, partly with third party funding, partly solely funded by the ZBW. A part of these electronic products is already hosted by the ZBW and counts among the items that are preserved in the digital archive. 20th Century Press Archive: a portal with access to archival material consisting of press clippings from newspapers covering the time period from the beginning of the 20th century to the year 1949.