V13A-4764:
DECADE Web Portal: Integrating MaGa, EarthChem and GVP Will Further Our Knowledge on Earth Degassing

Monday, 15 December 2014
Carlo Cardellini1, Alessandro Frigeri2, Kerstin A Lehnert3, Jason Ash4, Brendan McCormick5, Giovanni Chiodini6, Tobias P Fischer7 and Elizabeth Cottrell5, (1)Università di Perugia, Dipartimento di Fisica e Geologia, Perugia, Italy, (2)IAPS-INAF, Rome, Italy, (3)Columbia University, Palisades, NY, United States, (4)University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, United States, (5)National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Department of Mineral Sciences, Washington, DC, United States, (6)INGV Observatorio Vesuviano, 8124 Napoli, Italy, (7)University of New Mexico, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Albuquerque, NM, United States
Abstract:
The release of gases from the Earth’s interior to the exosphere takes place in both volcanic and non-volcanic areas of the planet. Fully understanding this complex process requires the integration of geochemical, petrological and volcanological data. At present, major online data repositories relevant to studies of degassing are not linked and interoperable.

We are developing interoperability between three of those, which will support more powerful synoptic studies of degassing. The three data systems that will make their data accessible via the DECADE portal are: (1) the Smithsonian Institution’s Global Volcanism Program database (GVP) of volcanic activity data, (2) EarthChem databases for geochemical and geochronological data of rocks and melt inclusions, and (3) the MaGa database (Mapping Gas emissions) which contains compositional and flux data of gases released at volcanic and non-volcanic degassing sites. These databases are developed and maintained by institutions or groups of experts in a specific field, and data are archived in formats specific to these databases.

In the framework of the Deep Earth Carbon Degassing (DECADE) initiative of the Deep Carbon Observatory (DCO), we are developing a web portal that will create a powerful search engine of these databases from a single entry point. The portal will return comprehensive multi-component datasets, based on the search criteria selected by the user. For example, a single geographic or temporal search will return data relating to compositions of emitted gases and erupted products, the age of the erupted products, and coincident activity at the volcano.

The development of this level of capability for the DECADE Portal requires complete synergy between these databases, including availability of standard-based web services (WMS, WFS) at all data systems. Data and metadata can thus be extracted from each system without interfering with each database’s local schema or being replicated to achieve integration at the DECADE web portal. The DECADE portal will enable new synoptic perspectives on the Earth degassing process. Other data systems can be easily plugged in using the existing framework. Our vision is to explore Earth degassing related datasets over previously unexplored spatial or temporal ranges.