Climate of the Past (Apr 2016)

Palaeo-sea-level and palaeo-ice-sheet databases: problems, strategies, and perspectives

  • A. Düsterhus,
  • A. Rovere,
  • A. E. Carlson,
  • B. P. Horton,
  • V. Klemann,
  • L. Tarasov,
  • N. L. M. Barlow,
  • T. Bradwell,
  • J. Clark,
  • A. Dutton,
  • W. R. Gehrels,
  • F. D. Hibbert,
  • M. P. Hijma,
  • N. Khan,
  • R. E. Kopp,
  • D. Sivan,
  • T. E. Törnqvist

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-12-911-2016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
pp. 911 – 921

Abstract

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Sea-level and ice-sheet databases have driven numerous advances in understanding the Earth system. We describe the challenges and offer best strategies that can be adopted to build self-consistent and standardised databases of geological and geochemical information used to archive palaeo-sea-levels and palaeo-ice-sheets. There are three phases in the development of a database: (i) measurement, (ii) interpretation, and (iii) database creation. Measurement should include the objective description of the position and age of a sample, description of associated geological features, and quantification of uncertainties. Interpretation of the sample may have a subjective component, but it should always include uncertainties and alternative or contrasting interpretations, with any exclusion of existing interpretations requiring a full justification. During the creation of a database, an approach based on accessibility, transparency, trust, availability, continuity, completeness, and communication of content (ATTAC3) must be adopted. It is essential to consider the community that creates and benefits from a database. We conclude that funding agencies should not only consider the creation of original data in specific research-question-oriented projects, but also include the possibility of using part of the funding for IT-related and database creation tasks, which are essential to guarantee accessibility and maintenance of the collected data.