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Field and analytical data from Tipperary CO2 seep, Daylesford, Australia (2017)

This dataset contains: 1. An excel spreadsheet of field data from Tipperary pool, including CO2 bubble locations, raw and derived flux data, and field description. March 2017 field campaign. 2. Python scripts for two point correlation function, a spatial statistical method used to describe the spatial distribution of points, and applied to Tipperary pool CO2 bubbling points to determine geological control on their distribution. As reported in: Roberts, J.J., Leplastrier, A., Feitz, A., Bell, A., Karolyte, R., Shipton, Z.K. Structural controls on the location and distribution of CO2 leakage at a natural CO2 spring in Daylesford, Australia. IJGHGC.

Simple

Date (Publication)
2019-03-15
Citation identifier
http://data.bgs.ac.uk/id/dataHolding/13607431
Point of contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

University of Strathclyde

Jennifer Roberts

not available

Author

University of Strathclyde

Jennifer Roberts

not available

Point of contact
Maintenance and update frequency
notApplicable

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

  • Geology

BGS Thesaurus of Geosciences

  • Monitoring

  • Carbon capture and storage

  • UKCCS

  • Carbon dioxide

  • NGDC Deposited Data

  • Geology

dataCentre
  • NGDC Deposited Data
  • UKCCS
Keywords
  • NERC_DDC

Access constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
licenceOGL
Other constraints
Available under the Open Government Licence subject to the following acknowledgement accompanying the reproduced NERC materials "Contains NERC materials ©NERC [year]"
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints

The copyright of materials derived from the British Geological Survey's work is vested in the Natural Environment Research Council [NERC]. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a retrieval system of any nature, without the prior permission of the copyright holder, via the BGS Intellectual Property Rights Manager. Use by customers of information provided by the BGS, is at the customer's own risk. In view of the disparate sources of information at BGS's disposal, including such material donated to BGS, that BGS accepts in good faith as being accurate, the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) gives no warranty, expressed or implied, as to the quality or accuracy of the information supplied, or to the information's suitability for any use. NERC/BGS accepts no liability whatever in respect of loss, damage, injury or other occurence however caused.

Other constraints

Available under the Open Government Licence subject to the following acknowledgement accompanying the reproduced NERC materials "Contains NERC materials ©NERC [year]"

Language
English
Topic category
  • Geoscientific information
N
S
E
W
thumbnail




Begin date
2017-03-01
End date
2018-03-01
Supplemental Information

The full method is described in Roberts, J.J., Leplastrier, A., Feitz, A., Bell, A., Karolyte, R., Shipton, Z.K. Structural controls on the location and distribution of CO2 leakage at a natural CO2 spring in Daylesford, Australia. IJGHGC. Bubble locations were determined using an Altus APS3G high precision GNSS survey system for Real Time Kinematic (RTK) position measurements. The UTM coordinates of the feature are relative to a base station at Tipperary. CO2 flux measurements were obtained using a West Systems portable flux system with attached accumulation chamber (type B) and LI-840A CO2/H2O gas analyser. A hollow 50mm PVC pipe frame was attached to the base of the accumulation chamber as a floatation device in order to facilitate flux sampling at the water surface. The base of the accumulation chamber was therefore slightly submerged in water and this change in volume was accounted for when applying the ACK (a conversion factor between ppm/sec (instrument unit) and g/m2/day). ACK temperature and pressure corrections (see Annex A) were made using meteorological measurements recorded at the nearby Ballarat Airport at 10 min intervals. The maximum bubble rate was determined using the West Systems Software (Flux Revision 3.99.4) and optimizing the flux integration for the maximum slope over 20 seconds (bubbles) and 60 seconds (background).

Unique resource identifier
WGS 84 / UTM zone 55S (EPSG::32755)
Distribution format
Name Version

.xlsx

.py python code

OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name
http://www.bgs.ac.uk/ukccs/accessions/index.html#item126354
OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name
http://dx.doi.org/10.5285/fa71e160-8016-4fb8-adab-6087466aaea2

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Hierarchy level
Dataset
Other

dataset

Conformance result

Title

INSPIRE Implementing rules laying down technical arrangements for the interoperability and harmonisation of Geology

Date (Publication)
2011
Explanation

See the referenced specification

Pass
No

Conformance result

Title

Commission Regulation (EU) No 1089/2010 of 23 November 2010 implementing Directive 2007/2/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards interoperability of spatial data sets and services

Date (Publication)
2010-12-08
Explanation

See http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2010:323:0011:0102:EN:PDF

Pass
No
Statement

The full method is described in Roberts, J.J., Leplastrier, A., Feitz, A., Bell, A., Karolyte, R., Shipton, Z.K. Structural controls on the location and distribution of CO2 leakage at a natural CO2 spring in Daylesford, Australia. IJGHGC. Bubble locations were determined using an Altus APS3G high precision GNSS survey system for Real Time Kinematic (RTK) position measurements. The UTM coordinates of the feature are relative to a base station at Tipperary. CO2 flux measurements were obtained using a West Systems portable flux system with attached accumulation chamber (type B) and LI-840A CO2/H2O gas analyser. A hollow 50mm PVC pipe frame was attached to the base of the accumulation chamber as a floatation device in order to facilitate flux sampling at the water surface. The base of the accumulation chamber was therefore slightly submerged in water and this change in volume was accounted for when applying the ACK (a conversion factor between ppm/sec (instrument unit) and g/m2/day). ACK temperature and pressure corrections (see Annex A) were made using meteorological measurements recorded at the nearby Ballarat Airport at 10 min intervals. The maximum bubble rate was determined using the West Systems Software (Flux Revision 3.99.4) and optimizing the flux integration for the maximum slope over 20 seconds (bubbles) and 60 seconds (background).

Metadata

File identifier
84253d2d-ba4c-1d9f-e054-002128a47908 XML
Metadata language
English
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Date stamp
2025-05-07
Metadata standard name
UK GEMINI
Metadata standard version

2.3

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

British Geological Survey

enquiries@bgs.ac.uk

Point of contact
Dataset URI

http://data.bgs.ac.uk/id/dataHolding/13607431

 
 

Overviews

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Spatial extent

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Keywords

NGDC Deposited Data UKCCS


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