Talk:Abstract

For each dataset published in PANGAEA, the abstract provides a concise and method-oriented description of the observation or measurement, namely what, when, where, why and how the data was collected. The summary should consist of meaningful running text. The format of the dataset abstract is the same as that of paper abstracts.

For data submissions with single data tables, the abstract should be inserted into the description section of the submission form or be attached as a text file. The length should be ideally limited to 5000 characters. If a submission contains several data sets (tables), an individual abstract must be provided for each data set. Multiple abstracts are best attached as a text file. Dataset specific abstracts can be similar to one another, but should contain at least one sentence that specifically relates to content of the respective data table.

Information that an abstract should contain

 * WHAT are the observations made, what parameters were measured (especially if you publish data in files like netCDF, or other proprietory formats), what samples were collected, what experiments were performed, what was modeled?
 * WHEN was the data collection done, what is the temporal coverage? The precision of this information should be made in context of the temporal extent of the dataset, e.g. geological era, centuries, millennia, decades, months, days, ...
 * WHERE was the data collection done on Earth, what is the geographical coverage? The precision of this information should be made in context of the spatial extent of the dataset, e.g.: global, sea, ocean, continent, country, region, ...
 * WHY was the data collected? What was the purpose? This will have important implications for reusability of the data, and its possible limitations for other purposes.
 * HOW was the data collected? Which methods were used to collect the data? During which campaign or cruise were the data collected?
 * Abstract may contain necessary references. If you include a reference, provide the article DOI or a full citation (if no DOI is available). '''ANY EXCEPTIONS HERE?"

What to avoid

 * Avoid the interpretation of results.
 * Avoid acronyms and abbreviations; if you use them, first spell them out.
 * Do not simply copy & paste manuscript abstracts. Abstracts need to be dataset specific and unique.
 * Many metadata items are already listed in the metaheader of the published dataset. Like that, they are both human and machine readable and do not have to be part of the abstract. These include for example:
 * Contact information of the PI (is listed in the Parameter table of the dataset)
 * Link to the cruise report, chief scientist (is part of the Event information in the dataset or can be added as a reference)
 * Exact geolocation (is part of the Event information in the dataset)
 * Title and citation of the related article (article is added as a reference)

Examples
I FEEL THAT THESE LINKS DO NOT WORK? I could access the links without problems, but the link to the data collection should be exchanged: all the single data sets in this collection do not contain an abstract--Judith s weber (talk) 2021-01-28T14:41:26 (UTC)
 * A dataset with an informative abstract:
 * Abstract for a data collection:
 * Abstract for a data collection with additional abstracts for individual data sets: