Hi Steve, you can find thousands of openly published dwc archives at the GBIF registry: http://www.gbif.org/dataset
unless it is a biocase or digir resource each details page contains the link to the dwca on the right side. Taxon and Event core datasets are always dwc-as best, markus Von meinem iPhone gesendet > Am 25.10.2016 um 06:35 schrieb Quentin Groom > <[email protected]>: > > Hi Steve, > I have a sampling event dataset on GBIF, which is quite richly populated. > http://www.gbif.org/dataset/5d784d06-fa1d-4f00-8cdc-663d04d26061 > Regards > Quentin > > > > Dr. Quentin Groom > (Botany and Information Technology) > > Botanic Garden Meise > Domein van Bouchout > B-1860 Meise > Belgium > > ORCID: 0000-0002-0596-5376 > > Landline; +32 (0) 226 009 20 ext. 364 > FAX: +32 (0) 226 009 45 > > E-mail: [email protected] > Skype name: qgroom > Website: www.botanicgarden.be > > >> On 25 October 2016 at 02:06, Steve Baskauf <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> I have been playing around with turning Darwin Core Archives into RDF [1] >> and would like to extend my experiments to attempting to integrate data from >> archives that have very different core files. I have played with the >> dwcaMolluscsAndorra.zip Occurrence archive mentioned in Annex 3 of the DwC-A >> How-To Guide [2], but the Whales-DWC-A.zip file isn't available any more (I >> guess because of the demise of Google Code). A little bit of Google >> searching failed to turn up additional obvious example files. >> >> If anyone would be interested in making DwC-A archives available to me, I'd >> appreciate it. I'm particularly interested in archives that have cores >> other than Occurrence (although an Occurrence archive that has more complex >> data, including extensions, than the mollusc example would be welcome). If >> there are any MaterialSample or Event core arcives, that would be >> particularly interesting. >> Preferably, I'd like to have access to archives that contain publicly >> available data, since I'm likely to blog about the outcome and potentially >> use the data in examples. If there are publicly available archives >> downloadable via a URL, you can reply to the list - otherwise let me know >> how I could access your example. >> >> Thanks in advance for your help! >> Steve Baskauf >> >> [1] >> http://baskauf.blogspot.com/2016/10/guid-o-matic-meets-darwin-core-archives.html >> [2] http://www.gbif.org/resource/80636 >> >> -- >> Steven J. Baskauf, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer >> Vanderbilt University Dept. of Biological Sciences >> >> postal mail address: >> PMB 351634 >> Nashville, TN 37235-1634, U.S.A. >> >> delivery address: >> 2125 Stevenson Center >> 1161 21st Ave., S. >> Nashville, TN 37235 >> >> office: 2128 Stevenson Center >> phone: (615) 343-4582, fax: (615) 322-4942 >> If you fax, please phone or email so that I will know to look for it. >> http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu >> http://vanderbilt.edu/trees >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> tdwg-content mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://lists.tdwg.org/mailman/listinfo/tdwg-content > > _______________________________________________ > tdwg-content mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.tdwg.org/mailman/listinfo/tdwg-content
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