1817 results

Scientific data collected on the _Westward, Corwith Cramer,_ and _Robert C. Seamans_ are invaluable products of SEA’s educational research programs. SEA supports dissemination and sharing of data with educators and researchers to benefit the broader science community and the public. We aim to encourage and ensure fair access to SEA data while also preserving the intellectual property of individual researchers and seeking opportunities for collaboration.

To access cruise reports summarizing the scientific operations of each voyage, and/or to request access to SEA data or samples (Standard Collections or otherwise), please complete the [SEA Data Request Form](https://www.sea.edu/SEA_Research/sea-data-request). This process is required of all interested parties, including SEA alumni. Requests will be referred to SEA’s data management team for review.

Browse the SEA collection of Cruise Reports and Publications hosted on the __[Woods Hole Open Access Server](https://darchive.mblwhoilibrary.org/)__.

2001 – 2012 data set from [Law et al. (2014) North and South Pacific paper](https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es4053076) in Environmental Science & Technology available at [http://dx.doi.org/10.1594/IEDA/100432](http://dx.doi.org/10.1594/IEDA/100432)

Bio-optical flow-through and profile data from 2008-2009

Zettler, Erik R.; Sea Education Association (2011). Oceanographic profile temperature and salinity measurements collected using CTD in the North Atlantic and North Pacific from 1988 to 2005 (NCEI Accession 0002221)

Flow-through and profile data from the _Robert C. Seamans_

This shapefile shows the global 12 nautical miles zone. It can be opened in QGIS and Google Earth.

This is a shapefile layer that shows the global EEZ. It can be opened in any GIS software.

vegetation types within the mainland coastal region provinces

vegetation types for the provinces in the PNG highlands region

Data valid as of 09/04/2019

A direct internet link to access the PIPAP portal resources.

Polystyrene constitutes the largest waste category which supports the governments plans to ban polystyrene food packaging, cups and plates in 2020.

**data extracted from the excel sheet**

Of the plastic counted, over 77% of the plastic can be categorised as single use plastics. Single use plastics are products that are designed to be used once and then disposed of. This includes shopping bags, food wrappers, take-away containers, water bottles and disposable nappies.

Analysis and Chart visualization of waste items collected by percentage (%).

Chart visualization of the data collected related to waste category.