Monday, September 30, 2013

New Shale Network Webinar

A HydroDesktop screenshot of sites in the Shale Network database.

Last week, Dr. Sue Brantley gave a presentation about the Shale Network as a part of the Penn State Water Resources Extension Webinar Series.

To view a recording of the presentation, or view the presentation slides as a .pdf, visit this page:


Monday, September 23, 2013

More Slides from the Open Water Symposium...


Last week, I posted Dr. Couch's slides from the Open Water Symposium in Brussels, but he was not the only member of the CUAHSI community presenting at the meeting. Dr. Daniel Ames, who leads HydroDesktop development, also gave an invited talk. Dr. Ames sent along the slides from his talk last week, entitled Open Source Tools for Hydrologic Data Management Sharing and Discovery: Introducing HydroDesktop and the CUAHSI Hydrologic Information System (HIS)...Swimming in Data Without Drowning in the Deluge, which I have also posted on the WDC Presentations page 


Friday, September 20, 2013

Want to Publish Data in the WDC Catalog....on Linux?

Tux is down with HIS...are you?
The CUAHSI staff have received multiple inquiries lately regarding the use of HIS software on Linux. While the majority of our applications have been developed in and for a Windows environment, these are not the only tools in our toolbox! Our primary data access tool (HydroDesktop) is still dependent on Windows, but if you are looking to publish data in the WDC Catalog from a Linux machine, HydroServer Lite is available and waiting for you!

HydroServer Lite is a lightweight version of HydroServer written in PHP. It can be deployed on any web hosting service that supports PHP and MySQL and is fully compatible with all of the other components of HIS. An existing example of HydroServer Lite being put to use in the WDC Catalog is out of Brigham Young University's Gil Ecosystem and Global Change Ecology Lab. The details of this data source can be seen here on the HIS Central website.

As always, if you have any questions or would like assistance in publishing your data, please email me!



Monday, September 16, 2013

Slides from Brussels...

Today, Dr. Couch spoke at the 2nd OpenWater Symposium in Brussels. This symposium "aims at sharing experiences, tools, training materials and model codes applicable in the water domain." Dr. Couch represented the WDC with his invited talk entitled Toward a Global Water Data Infrastructure: Lessons Learned and Future of the CUAHSI Hydrologic Information System

Click the link above to view Dr. Couch's slides, and if you'd like to see more presentations from the WDC Community visit the Presentations page on the WDC site.


Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Now Accepting Applications for 2013 Pathfinder Fellowships


Last week, the application period for the 2013 CUAHSI Pathfinder Fellowships opened. The Pathfinder Fellowship program is an avenue for CUAHSI to support graduate students in conducting field research. It enables students to travel to an additional field site to conduct comparative research, to collaborate with a research group using alternate approaches or modeling methods, or to work with researchers on adding an interdisciplinary dimension to a water science research project.

Want to know more about the research being enabled? Click here to check out the research that was done by the 2012 Pathfinder Fellows.

Want to apply? Visit the CUAHSI website to download the application materials.

Important Pathfinder Dates
  • Application period opens: August 28, 2013
  • Application due: October 18, 2013
  • Notification of recipients will be made by November 29, 2013
  • Travel funds will be available starting February 1, 2014
  • Travel must be completed by January 31, 2015


Wednesday, August 21, 2013

HydroDesktop Demo and World Water Week



Although it does not have any narration or sound, I've posted a new HydroDesktop demo video on YouTube. The video does not have any sound because I made it for inclusion in a looping powerpoint about the WDC that our Executive Director, Rick, will take with him to World Water Week in a couple weeks. Rick along with film researcher Linda Lilienfeld will be convening a seminar on Let's Talk About Water. For more about communicating water science through film, visit the Let's Talk About Water website.



Thursday, July 25, 2013

New Materials for STEM Education


I've created a new page for HIS laboratory exercises on the WDC website. At the moment, we have two substantial educational modules available that were developed using HydroDesktop Version 1.5. The first, which was developed at the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research at Wilkes University, examines water quality and water quantity in the Susquehanna River Basin with HydroDesktop. The second, developed at Brigham Young University Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, utilizes R scripts to perform analyses (like flood probability) on data downloaded from the WDC catalog. If you have used HIS in your classroom, and are willing to share your materials, please let us know!



Tuesday, July 23, 2013

New Workshop Materials Available


Last week, CUAHSI hosted the 2013 Conference on Hydroinformatics and Modeling where we held four workshops. The materials for these workshops are now available on the WDC website:


  • HydroDesktop 1: Data Discovery - This workshop covers the basics in HydroDesktop; downloading, viewing, and exporting data.
  • HydroDesktop 2: Data Discovery & Analysis - This session repeats some of the material from HydroDesktop 1, but adds a statistical analysis component using R.
  • Data Publication with the WDC: Aside from asking CUAHSI to host your data, how can you publish data with the WDC? This exercise teaches participants how to configure SQL Server and load data into a SQL database, how to deploy WaterOneFlow Web Services, how to register your web service with the central catalog, and how to test your web service using both ODM Tools and HydroDesktop to view data. 
  • Writing Custom Plugins for HydroDesktop: Want to learn how you can extend the capabilities of HydroDesktop? Learn how to develop an extension...


Thanks to everyone who made it to Logan! We will also have the slides from presentations available online soon as well.


Monday, July 8, 2013

Key for Box & Whisker Plot Added to HydroDesktop User Guide

The HydroDesktop development team has created a key for Box and Whisker plots (an option on the Graph Ribbon), which I have posted under the Working with Data section of the User Guide...it can also be viewed above.


Monday, July 1, 2013

Research Poster: How New Data Sharing & Access Can Transform the Way We Address Water Resources and Hazards


Last week, CUAHSI staff members Dr. Jennifer Arrigo and Kayla Berry attended the 2013 AGU Science Policy Conference in Washington, D.C. At the conference, Jennifer and Kayla presented a poster highlighting CUAHSI's Water Data Center, HIS technology, and how data sharing can transform the way decision-makers can address water resource issues. View the poster above!


Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Last Week to Register Online for the 2013 CUAHSI Conference on Hydroinformatics and Modeling!


Online registration closes for the 2013 CUAHSI Conference on Hydroinformatics and Modeling this Sunday, June 30. If you have not done so, and are planning to attend, register today!

The conference will be held at Utah State University in Logan, Utah from July 17-19.
Confirmed Keynote and Invited Speakers Include:
  • Dr. Alva CouchInterim Director of the CUAHSI Water Data Center (Opening Keynote)
  • Dr. Stan AhaltRenaissance Computing Institute (RENCI) - PI of the Water Science Software Institute Conceptualization Project (Keynote)
  • Dr. Anthony Aufdenkampe, Stroud Water Research Institute and Principal Investigator on the CZO Data Project
  • Dr. Amarnath Gupta, San Diego Supercomputing Center (SDSC) - Semantics & Ontology, Examples from neuroscience
  • Dr. Praveen Kumar, University of Illinois, Urbana - SEAD Project
  • Dr. David Maidment, University of Texas at Austin - Leader of the CUAHSI HIS Project, 2008-2012 (Closing Keynote)
  • Dr. Emilio Mayorga, University of Washington - Addressing the intersection of biogeochemistry and (geo)informatics (Keynote)
  • Dr. Ramakrishna Nemani, NASA - NASA Earth Exchange (NEX)
  • Dr. Silvano PecoraItaly Institute for Environmental Protection & Research - Discussing deployment of HIS technology in Italy
  • Dr. Jordan ReadUS Geological Survey - USGS partnerships and innovations in modern hydroinformatics
  • Dr. David Tarboton, Utah State University, Extending HIS through the new HydroShare Project
  • Dr. Shaowen WangUniversity of Illinois, Creator of CyberGIS

In addition to the very accomplished presenters listed above, there will additional presenters, research posters, and a number of HIS related workshops. I will be leading:
  • HydroDesktop 1
  • HydroDesktop 2 
  • Publishing Data with the WDC

Dr. Daniel Ames, who is the lead developer of HydroDesktop, will also be leading a workshop on writing plugin tools for HydroDesktop.

Questions? Email me (jpollak@cuahsi.org) or CUAHSI's Communications and Outreach Specialist, Kayla Berry (kberry@cuahsi.org).

Hope to see you there! 



Monday, June 17, 2013

Data Sources Registered in the HIS Central Catalog

This week, I am working on updating metrics and visualizations for the HIS Catalog. Above, you can see one of these visualizations, which represents the total number of data sources registered in our central catalog. We are up to 104 data sources, which is almost four times the number we started with in 2008! The visualization above was created with IBM Many Eyes, which is a great, easy (and free!) tool to visualize data with.


Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Data Center Announcments

Today, we have a couple of announcements related to the Water Data Center. First, the new Data Center website is up and running at http://wdc.cuahsi.org. The website located at http://his.cuahsi.org will now become an archive of the HIS Research project, which was led by David Maidment (University of Texas at Austin) and concluded in 2011.

Additionally, in establishing the Data Center, we are in need of policies that will guide the vision and its operation. Drafts of these policies have been posted to this blog, and are available for comment until July 17. Please review these documents and post your comments today!



Monday, June 3, 2013

Shale Network Featured on NPR's State Impact

The Shale Network project was recently featured in a piece on NPR's State Impact with footage coming from the workshop that was held at PSU a couple weeks ago. The video, embedded below, has Dr. Sue Brantley (PI of the Shale Network) discussing their approach in creating an online database to enable research regarding the potential impacts of natural gas extraction on water in the Marcellus Shale region. I also got a few seconds on camera to do a quick plug for HIS!




Friday, May 31, 2013

Q&A with WDC Director Dr. Alva Couch


I recently sat down with the Director of the CUAHSI Water Data Center (and my boss!) for a brief Question and Answer session about the initial phases of WDC operations. Dr. Alva Couch is a professor of Computer Science at Tufts University and is on loan to CUAHSI to serve as the WDC Interim Director for the first year of the the WDC's operation...

Q: Who are you? What brought you to managing a national facility for water data?
A: I am a researcher in the relatively new area of systems and network management, with additional expertise in cloud computing, performance analysis, and software engineering. I became involved first with CUAHSI on the Ontology project that seeks to develop metadata vocabularies and ontologies to enable precise data search. My student, Alex Bedig, created a new ontology-driven user interface that is only practical because of performance engineering that decreases query response time by a factor of about 100. In the context of this development, I became aware of CUAHSI Hydrologic Information System (HIS) and consider it a worthy project to be sustained. I look forward to applying my skills in systems management, performance engineering, and software engineering to creating the next generation of data discovery, publication, and analysis tools.  I consider myself first and foremost a scientist, and hope to aid the worldwide community of water scientists in solving some of the world’s most pressing problems.

Q: What exactly is the Data Center? What is its relationship to the CUAHSI HIS?
A: The Water Data Center was born out of the efforts in creating the CUAHSI HIS. At the end of the HIS Project, HIS remained in prototype form. The first priority of the Water Data Center is to transform CUAHSI HIS from a prototype to a product. This entails re-engineering some features and processes for more robustness, re-hosting the main services in a robust cloud environment, and instituting management processes to ensure overall quality of data services and support.

Q: I’ve heard the Data Center will be providing researchers a whole bunch of new services, but what can I do now?
A: At this time, the WDC continues to support the core services developed during the CUAHSI HIS project, including catalog metadata search services and HydroServer data publication services using the WaterOneFlow (WOF) service model. There is no plan to deprecate these services; we will instead make them more reliable and useful. Thus, one can publish data using the current HydroServer software suite and it will continue to be accessible. One can register one’s data in the HIS Central catalog and it will continue to be discoverable. The new planned services are not a replacement for CUAHSI HIS; they are extensions of it.

Q: These data services sound great, but I don’t have appropriate access (or don’t know how) to manage a server. How can I publish my data?
A: At the present time, CUAHSI runs one data publication server HydroPortal that one can use to publish one’s data. Please contact Jon Pollak (jpollak@cuahsi.org) for more details on how to utilize this service. In the near future, we plan to move this service to the cloud and provide more general data publication tools, including a web portal for data upload. If you have data ready for publication, my advice would be not to wait-  let’s get it online now! The WDC staff will move it to the cloud later.

Q: If I’m already a user of HIS, should I be worried about how upcoming changes to the system might impact me and my work?
A: The Water Data Center is closely coordinating its activities with other CUAHSI affiliated activities such as HydroDesktop development to ensure that there is no disruption to the users in community. The short-term changes to services are enhancements that provide more detail on data and allow more detailed specification of searches. These enhancements will be made backward-compatible to older clients that do not have the ability to utilize the new features.

Q: If I need technical assistance, who should I contact?

A: In general, your first line of contact should be Jon Pollak (jpollak@cuahsi.org), our User Support Specialist. He will refer you to others in the Water Data Center team as appropriate to your needs. 


Tuesday, May 28, 2013

The 2013 Shale Network Workshop

The Shale Network database contains data from over 22,000 sites in the Marcellus Shale Region.

Last week, I visited State College, Pennsylvania to provide HIS related support at the 2013 Shale Network Workshop. The focus of this event was to bring together a number of stakeholders in the Marcellus Shale region to investigate potential impacts of natural gas extraction on water quality and water quantity. The Shale Network group is examining this question through the development of a database of applicable data. By publishing this database in HIS, the Shale Network can examine the data alongside our other data sources (including EPA and USGS), determine possible data gaps, and use HIS tools, such as HydroDesktop, to investigate what the data can reveal to researchers in addition to policymakers. View the workshop's materials by clicking the links below:


The Shale Network database presently contains over 669,700 total data values from 58,133 time series measured at 22,904 different sites.



Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Video: May's Informatics Call

I've posted the informatics call from a couple weeks ago on YouTube. It can also be seen embedded below:


The agenda for this call was:

1. Demo of the Open Hydrospheric Modeling Framework (OHMF)Xu Liang (Pittsburgh) andYao Liang (IUPUI). From their EarthCube Concept Award Group Page: “OHMF is an open meta-modeling framework, which can integrate data and models easily and incrementally for knowledge discovery and management, for the research and applications communities (initially focused on the hydrosphere). The goal is to enable these communities to freely contribute their individual computation models, to interact with each other, as well as with different data sources.” Yao will be giving a demo of the system, which now include “agents” to access NASA, USGS and CUAHSI data.

2. Exposing CUAHSI variables as a SKOS serviceAlva Couch (CUAHSI WDC). Alva will discuss the Data Center’s plans to:
  • Expose variables via SKOS services 
  • Embed SKOS links in HIS Central Metadata
  • Return SKOS references to HIS Central queries
  • Cross-link CUAHSI SKOS other SKOS servers, including GEOSS GEMET and CUNY EDSC


Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Tomorrow's CUAHSI Informatics Community Teleconference - Expanding the HIS Technology

Please join us tomorrow, Wednesday May 8 at Noon (ET) for a CUAHSI Informatics Community Teleconference! We will have two presenters discussing projects and activities that are expanding the use of CUAHSI HIS technology and the CUAHSI Water Data Center services...

1. Demo of the Open Hydrospheric Modeling Framework (OHMF), Xu Liang (Pittsburgh) and Yao Liang (IUPUI). From their EarthCube Concept Award Group Page: “OHMF is an open meta-modeling framework, which can integrate data and models easily and incrementally for knowledge discovery and management, for the research and applications communities (initially focused on the hydrosphere). The goal is to enable these communities to freely contribute their individual computation models, to interact with each other, as well as with different data sources.” Yao will be giving a demo of the system, which now include “agents” to access NASA, USGS and CUAHSI data.

2. Exposing CUAHSI variables as a SKOS service, Alva Couch (CUAHSI WDC). Alva will discuss the Data Center’s plans to:
  • Expose variables via SKOS services 
  • Embed SKOS links in HIS Central Metadata
  • Return SKOS references to HIS Central queries
  • Cross-link CUAHSI SKOS other SKOS servers, including GEOSS GEMET and CUNY EDSC

Connection details
http://cuahsi.adobeconnect.com/his/ (have the system call you back or call the number below)
1-866-244-8528  Code: 391191


Thursday, May 2, 2013

Watch: Using CUAHSI HIS to Support Large Scale Collaborative Research in Utah


Yesterday's cyberseminar is now up on YouTube.Watch as Dr. Jeff Horsburgh (Utah State University) discusses the CUAHSI HIS and other cyberinfrastructure components of the iUTAH initiative. For a full description, please visit this earlier blog post.

This is the last talk of our spring series... A big thank you to our presenters as well as all of you who have joined us throughout the semester!


Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Tomorrow: Using CUAHSI HIS to Support Large Scale Collaborative Research in Utah

Tomorrow's HIS Cyberseminar will conclude the Spring 2013 series. We began this spring's series with the a talk about how researchers in the Northeastern US are using HIS and we will conclude the series tomorrow with an example of how researchers are using the technology out West...


Using CUAHSI HIS to Support Large Scale Collaborative Research in Utah 

Jeffery S. Horsburgh, Amber Jones, Stephanie Reeder, James Patton,
Juan Caraballo, Mauriel Ramirez, and Nathaniel Mouzon



 iUTAH (innovative Urban Transitions and Aridregion Hydro-­‐sustainability) is a statewide effort dedicated to maintaining and improving water sustainability in Utah. Synthesis of diverse data collection and modeling to support cross-­‐disciplinary and cross-­‐institutional research teams working on the iUTAH project is a challenge that requires storage, networking, computational, and human resources. The iUTAH Cyberinfrastructure Team (CI Team) is building the iUTAH Modeling and Data Federation (MDF) to support the full data life cycle and increase capacity for data collection, organization, management, sharing, synthesis to higher-­‐level products, and integration with models. The iUTAH MDF is an online system for iUTAH researchers and partners to share data, models, and other digital resources. As part of the iUTAH project, researchers from multiple Utah universities are developing a new sensor network called GAMUT (Gradients Along Mountain to Urban Transitions). The objective of GAMUT is to measure aspects of water inputs, outputs, and quality along a mountain-­‐to-­‐urban gradient in three Utah watersheds that share common water sources (winter-­‐derived precipitation) but differ in the human and biophysical nature of land-­‐use transitions. GAMUT will deploy sensors at aquatic and terrestrial sites for real-­‐time monitoring of common meteorological variables, snow accumulation and melt, soil moisture, surface water flow, and surface water quality. The multiple watershed, multiple institution, and scale of the GAMUT network present challenges for managing and publishing the data that will be produced. The iUTAH CI Team is building and deploying cyberinfrastructure to support management of the streaming sensor data, including components of the CUAHSI Hydrologic Information System (HIS). This includes tools for automated loading of streaming data into relational databases, data models for storing and accessing the data, software tools to facilitate the data quality control process, new applications to support data management and equipment tracking by iUTAH field technicians, and tools for publishing the data on the Internet. The iUTAH CI Team is focused on developing hardware and software systems that will improve iUTAH participants’ capacity for data collection, organization, management, sharing, synthesis to higher-­‐level products, and integration with models. The iUTAH MDF is coordinating across Utah universities, including provisioning hardware that enables hosting of data publication and sharing services as well as data storage resources for redundancy and for High Performance Computing support. In this presentation, we describe ongoing work to develop the hardware and software platforms that will create better access to data and new tools for collaboration among iUTAH participants.


Connection Details:
Conference Line: (866) 244-8528
Participant Code: 391191

Either have the system call you back once you log into Adobe Connect or dial in using the conference line and participant code. 

We hope you will join us tomorrow, May 1, at 3 PM Eastern.


Monday, April 29, 2013

Video: The Director's View of the CUAHSI Water Data Center


The recording of last Wednesday's (4/24/13) HIS Cyberseminar, entitled The Director's View of the CUAHSI Water Data Center, is now available on YouTube. In this talk, the current Data Center Director (Dr. Alva Couch), discusses some of the first year priorities for the new facility and gives a brief look into its future.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Wednesday's Cyberseminar: The Director's View of the CUAHSI Water Data Center



CUAHSI's Spring HIS Cyberseminar Series resumes this Wednesday with a talk from the Director of the CUAHSI Water Data Center, Dr. Alva Couch, who will discuss the goals and priorities of the recently funded data center:

In this talk, Dr. Couch will give users a glimpse of the future of the CUAHSI Water Data Center, from the point of view of its current director. Running a national Data Center of any kind is a constant balancing act between cost and value. The value of data -- and the value of a data center in providing it -- is easy to understand; it is measured in terms of whether the data helps the data center's constituents meet their scientific goals. However, curating and providing useful data incurs some perhaps surprising and counter- intuitive costs.  Thus, the director of any data center must answer some really difficult questions, including the most difficult question of all: "exactly what is the value of publishing a specific dataset?" From this point of view, Dr. Couch will describe some of the first-year priorities for the Water Data Center in detail, and give a brief look into its future.

To attend, follow the link and dial into the conference line listed below:

Conference Line: (866) 244-8528
Participant Code: 391191


We hope you will join us!


Thursday, April 18, 2013

2013 CUAHSI Conference on Hydroinformatics and Modeling - Registration Now Open!

Registration and Abstract Submission is now open for the 2013 CUAHSI Conference on Hydroinformatics and Modeling.

CUAHSI is hosting a conference on Hydrologic Information Systems and Modeling for researchers to showcase advances in hydrologic information system and modeling technology and their use to advance hydrologic science. Contributions are solicited on scientific progress enabled through the use of advanced information systems and models. The conference will include technical sessions on hydrologic information systems and hydrologic modeling and hands-on training and workshops to introduce the community to the services provided by the new CUAHSI Water Data Center.

Who Should Attend?


Researchers: Data discovery, analysis, and science enabled by information systems
Educators: Uses of water data for teaching
Modelers: Coupling models and data from multiple sources
Data Publishers: Organizing, storing, and making data available to others
Developers: Creating tools and contributing to the future of hydrologic information systems


Planned Topics Include:


  • Earth System Modeling
  • Semantics and Ontology
  • Data Interoperability with the Earth System
  • Data and Information Systems in Hydrologic Education
  • Programming Hydrologic Information Systems
  • Data Publication and Data Citation
  • Workflows
  • HPC and Cloud Computing
  • Sensor Networking and Telemetry
  • Emerging Technologies for Hydrologic Field Data Capture


Click to Register!


Wednesday, April 17, 2013

A Reminder - No HIS Cyberseminar Today

The cyberseminar that was previously scheduled for today, entitled Using CUAHSI HIS to Support Large-Scale Collaborative Research in Utah by Dr. Jeff Horsburgh of Utah State University, has been rescheduled to Wednesday, May 1.

Interested in the previous cyberseminars from this spring's series? Visit the CUAHSI website to watch video and download presentation slides.

Please join us next Wednesday when Dr. Alva Couch (CUAHSI; Tufts University) will discuss the new CUAHSI Water Data Center...details to come!



Monday, April 15, 2013

Video: A Modular, Open-Sourced Software for the Method of Anchored Distributions

Last week's HIS Cyberseminar, which discussed the Method of Anchored Distributions (MAD) software, is now available to view online. Developed as both a HydroDesktop plugin and a standalone application, this software is used for characterizing uncertainty in model parameters. Watch the full video below:




Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Tomorrow: A Modular, Open-Sourced Software for the Method of Anchored Distributions

Join us tomorrow, April 10, 2013 at 3 PM (Eastern) for the next HIS Cyberseminar, which will discuss a software development partnership between researchers at the University of California, Berkeley and Brigham Young University. Here is an abstract:

Title: A Modular, Open-Sourced Software for the Method of Anchored Distributions
Authors: Daniel P. Ames1, Matthew W. Over2, Carlos A. M. Osorio1, Yoram Rubin2
1 Brigham Young University, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Provo, UT
2University of California, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Berkeley, CA

The Method of Anchored Distributions software (in construction) is an extension to HydroDesktop for characterizing uncertainty in model parameters.  The software is designed to supplement the search and discovery of data with a suite of Bayesian statistical analysis tools.  The method is generally applicable and should support characterization of model parameters in a variety of scientific areas – current efforts are largely focused in subsurface hydrology, but new applications areas are a high priority.  The software is designed to be generically compatible with other numerical simulation and analysis tools to permit even greater utility for future users.  Our presentation will feature a brief summary of the Bayesian theory, a demonstration and discussion of a MAD application using the software, and an overview of the software architecture as well as development plans.

To attend, follow the link and dial into the conference line listed below:

Conference Line: (866) 244-8528
Participant Code: 391191

Once you have connected to the conference line, you will be prompted for the participant code.



Monday, April 8, 2013

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Tomorrow: What's New and What's Coming in HydroDesktop


Join us tomorrow, April 3, 2013 at 3 PM (Eastern) for the next installment of this Spring's HIS Cyberseminar Series. This week will feature Dr. Daniel P. Ames who leads the development of HydroDesktop at Brigham Young University:

HydroDesktop is the most widely used portal to the 95+ data sources registered in the CUAHSI Hydrologic Information System (HIS). HydroDesktop is a free and open source Geographic Information System-based tool that enables searching, downloading, visualizing, and analyzing of hydrologic and climate data registered in the CUAHSI HIS. As a research and development project, the HydroDesktop team, led by Brigham Young University, periodically releases new iterations of the software which is driven by user defined bug reports and feature requests facilitated by a web based software management system at http://hydrodesktop.codeplex.com. Dr. Dan Ames, the HydroDesktop project lead, will discuss this open source development process, will also detail the newest features in the current recommended release, version 1.5.12, and will discuss proposed features proposed for 2013 and beyond. 

To attend, follow the link and dial into the conference line listed below:

Conference Line: (866) 244-8528
Participant Code: 391191


Monday, April 1, 2013

Video: Using CUAHSI HIS to Assess Water Quality and Quantity Data in Regions of Hydraulic Fracturing

Last week's cyberseminar has been posted to YouTube. In case you missed it, Dr. Sue Brantley discussed the application of HIS to the Shale Network Research Coordination Network, which is gathering water quality and quantity data in areas that could be impacted by fracking (specifically the Marcellus Shale region). Watch the full video below:




Wednesday, March 27, 2013

ShaleNetwork Cyberseminar - Today!


A reminder: Today, at 3 PM Eastern, Dr. Sue Brantley (Pennsylvania State University, will be presenting in the first of our Spring HIS Cyberseminars. Dr. Brantley will be discussing the ShaleNetwork, which is a Research Coordination Network funded by the National Science Foundation:

Significant public controversy has developed in response to the use of hydrofracturing especially in the northeastern states underlain by the Marcellus shale where some citizens and scientists question whether shale gas recovery will contaminate local surface and ground waters. Researchers, government agencies, and citizen scientists in Pennsylvania are teaming up to run the ShaleNetwork (www.shalenetwork.org), an NSF-funded research collaboration network that is currently finding, collating, sharing, publishing, and exploring data related to water quality and quantity in areas that are exploiting shale gas. The effort, focused initially on Pennsylvania, is developing the ShaleNetwork database, which is hosted by CUAHSI and available for public download through the CUAHSI Hydrologic Information System. 


To join the Cyberseminar, follow the link and dial into the conference line listed below:

Conference Line: (866) 244-8528
Participant Code: 391191

Once dialed into the conference line, you will be prompted for the participant code.


Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Data Publication Guide Added


A Data Publication Guide has been added to this site, which provides the steps needed to publish data in the CUAHSI HIS. This guide will be accessible from the link on the navigation bar towards the top of this page and includes two sections:


These two topics provide the basics for HIS time series data publication, but the guide does not yet include some additional, more advanced features such as configuring the HydroServer Website application or setting up the HydroServer Map application.



Wednesday, March 20, 2013

HIS Cyberseminar Series Schedule Announced


Beginning March 27th, join CUAHSI at 3:00pm ET on Wednesdays for the Spring HIS Cyberseminar Series. This series features five speakers who will discuss the latest in development and deployment of CUAHSI's data services.


Wednesday, March 27, 2013: Sue Brantley, Pennsylvania State University
Using CUAHSI HIS in the Shale Network to Assess Water Quality and Quantity Data in Regions of Hydraulic Fracturing

WednesdayApril 3, 2013: Dan Ames, Brigham Young University
What's New and What's Coming in HydroDesktop

WednesdayApril 10, 2013: Dan Ames1, Matthew W. Over2, Carlos A. M. Osorio1, & Yoram Rubin2 
Brigham Young University1;University California, Berkeley
Inverse Modeling with the MAD Model Inversion Framework

WednesdayApril 24, 2013: Alva Couch, CUAHSI
HIS & the CUAHSI Water Data Center*


WednesdayMay 1, 2013: Jeff Horsburgh, Utah State University
Using CUAHSI HIS to Support Large-Scale Collaborative Research in Utah

*Tentative title

To join a Cyberseminar, follow the link and dial into the conference line listed below:

Conference Line: (866) 244-8528
Participant Code: 391191

Once dialed into the conference line, you will be prompted for the participant code.



Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Spotlight On: Kansas State Daily Weather Data

The Kansas State Daily Weather Data web service has data from 14 meteorological stations throughout Kansas.

The K-State Research and Extension is a partnership between Kansas State University and federal, state, and county governments. The mission of K-State Research and Extension is to be "...dedicated to a safe, sustainable, competitive food and fiber system and to strong, healthy communities, families and youth through integrated research, analysis and education." One aspect of working towards this goal is to gather and monitor environmental data. An example of such data collection coordinated through K-State Research and Extension is a network of 14 meteorological stations throughout the state of Kansas that capture weather data. Historical data (1985-2012) from this network were published in the HIS Catalog last year and include measurements of:

  • Precipitation
  • Air Temperature
  • Relative Humidity
  • Wind Speed
  • Net Radiation

This is a great data source for weather data in Kansas. In one HydroDesktop tutorial, I compared precipitation data from this service with discharge data from the USGS NWIS service to investigate the correlation between the two variables.


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

HydroPortal Will Experience Service Disruption this Friday 3/1/2013


Please be advised that HydroPortal, CUAHSI’s server that hosts a number of databases in the HIS Catalog, will experience service disruption this Friday, March 1 as CUAHSI relocates to a new office suite. During this time, data from the following publicly registered web services will be unavailable: 



The outage will likely last through the morning, but we will try to get the server relocated and back up as soon as possible. Please feel free to contact me with any questions or concerns.



Tuesday, February 26, 2013

CUAHSI Community Teleconferences on Informatics

On the first Wednesday of each month, CUAHSI hosts a community teleconference on Informatics that features research and projects involving, or are of interest to, the water science community. We have started to record these calls, so if you are unable to join the call you can still view the presentations!

To view previous calls, visit this page on the CUAHSI website. As of now, only February's call is available, which included presentations about The Swiss Experiment Platform and Sustainable Environment Actionable Data.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Can I Publish Gridded Data in HIS?

If you don't mind converting your data, then, yes!

The CUAHSI HIS was developed with the specific structure of a time series data in mind. This structure is typical of data from a stream sensor or other observations at a specific location. But what of other data types that are gridded such as precipitation estimates and model results? These data have not been publishable in HIS in the traditional manner, but it is possible to convert such data into the time series structure. There are multiple data sources registered in the HIS Catalog that have utilized such a conversion process; included in these are Multi-Sensor Precipitation Estimates from National Weather Service River Forecasting Centers as well as NASA NLDAS data. This approach is described in a recent Computers & Geosciences article:

John A. McEnery, Paul W. McKee, Gregory P. Shelton, Ryan W. Ramsey, Hydrologic information server for benchmark precipitation dataset, Computers & Geosciences, Volume 50, January 2013, Pages 145-153, ISSN 0098-3004, 10.1016/j.cageo.2012.08.005.
(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S009830041200283X)

The authors demonstrate this technique with NEXRAD radar data , the significance of which is described in the article's abstract:

"Over the past two decades, with the advent of NEXRAD radar, science to measure and record rainfall has improved dramatically. However, much existing data has not been readily available for public access or transferable among the agricultural, engineering and scientific communities. This project takes advantage of the existing CUAHSI Hydrologic Information System ODM model and tools to bridge the gap between data storage and data access, providing an accepted standard interface for internet access to the largest time-series dataset of NEXRAD precipitation data ever assembled."

See below for a few examples of data sources in the HIS Catalog that have used this method:


Thursday, February 7, 2013

Shale Network at the Rutgers' Earth and Planetary Sciences Spring Colloquium

Professor Sue Brantley, who is the Principal Investigator of the Shale Network project, will be presenting next week at Rutgers' Earth and Planetary Sciences Spring Colloquium. Professor Brantley's presentation, entitled Hydraulic Fracturing of Shales and Water Quality, will discuss how the Shale Network has gathered and analyzed water quality data in the Marcellus Shale region to examine the potential impacts of exploitation of natural gas through hydraulic fracturing (or fracking). The database that the Shale Network has developed is hosted by CUAHSI and the data are available in HydroDesktop through the power of HIS, which I highlighted in a previous post.


Details:
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Wright-Rieman Auditorium, Busch Campus
12:00 p.m.




Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Introduction to Agile Development

Scrum enables you to keep everything visible. It allows the team to know exactly what’s going on and make adjustments to the project to keep it moving forward.

Scrum Agile Development is a framework for software development that the has been influencing development in the CUAHSI community, which includes the approach taken with the development of HydroDesktop. In this iterative approach, a backlog of tasks is created, these tasks are prioritized, then the highest priority tasks are developed during a sprint that lasts for a specified duration. For HydroDesktop, we use Codeplex to create a backlog of issues and tasks and we have weekly meetings on Monday to identify tasks and discuss progress. The developers then work during the rest of the week to resolve the prioritized issues or develop high priority new features. The process then repeats itself the next week.

For more, check out this post on the Elementool Blog.



Thursday, January 31, 2013

Chicago's Drought

Last week, I looked at the extremes of flow in the Mississippi River by using HydroDesktop to download and examine discharge data from three sites along the river. For this post, I've decided to look at the effect of drought a bit further North.

Prior to European settlement, the Chicago River flowed into Lake Michigan. The flow was reversed in 1900 to improve sanitary conditions. Presently, however, drought conditions have caused the water level of Lake Michigan to drop to such an extent that the flow of the Chicago River may reverse to its natural (post-glacial) course. Such a reversal would have significant implications for the Chicago Metropolitan Area's infrastructure and, as such, this topic has been covered by multiple media outlets that include:


I was hoping to examine data from two angles to see the impact of drought on water bodies in the region. First, I wanted to find a time series of the water level of Lake Michigan, and second, I wanted to find discharge data of the Chicago River. Unfortunately, I did not find data I was satisfied with for the changing water level in the lake over the past few years, but I was able to find a solid source for the observed discharge of the river's North Branch (NWIS Daily Values) at a location near Albany Avenue.

Data for this post were downloaded from a site on the North Branch of the Chicago River...

...near Albany Avenue.

The data set from this site shows the impact that the drought has had on flow in this section of the river.


The graph above shows that the discharge during Spring of 2012 never reached the levels of the previous two years. While both 2010 and 2011 experienced flows of over 1,500 cubic feet per second, 2012's peak discharge did not even reach 1,000 cubic feet per second. If we take a look at precipitation data for the past three years, we can also see the drought signature in precipitation data. A quick look at the below graphs - precipitation observed near the Chicago Harbor Lock - reveals the fact that rainy days were less frequent in 2012 than in either of the previous two years.

2010 Precipitation near Chicago Harbor Lock

2011 Precipitation near Chicago Harbor Lock

2012 Precipitation near Chicago Harbor Lock