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® © 2013 Open Geospatial Consortium OGC

® ®

International Virtual Observatory System for Water Resources

Information

Lewis Leinenweber, Luis Bermudez April 8, 2013

EGU General Assembly 2013 Vienna, Austria

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A Story of a Cross Country River Basin

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A Story of a Cross Country River Basin

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Canadian settlers began using the St. Mary River as an irrigation source in

late 1800’s

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:LevelBasinFloodIrrigation.JPG

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American settlers began using the Milk River

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Resource scarcity

When the Milk River’s unreliability threatened the stability of the region, the US made plans for a canal and dam to divert St. Mary River water into the Milk River for use in Montana

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Canada became concern

Early 1900s - Alberta built a “spite canal” to show that it could siphon water diverted from the Milk River back into the St. Mary River further downstream.

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And on and on …

• … • 1909 Boundary Waters Treaty

– The two rivers should be treated as one for the purposes of irrigation and power

– …

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2013

Can we build a collection of interoperating data archives and software tools which utilize the internet to form a scientific research environment in which hydrological research programs can be conducted?

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2013

Can we build a collection of interoperating data archives and software tools which utilize the internet to form a scientific research environment in which hydrological research programs can be conducted? => Virtual Observatory

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Virtual Observatory The two basins in Canada and US and related observations are ALL treated like one observatory

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!

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OGC CHISP-1 Pilot

• Climatology-Hydrology Information Sharing Pilot, Phase 1 (CHISP-1)

• Sponsors

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CHISP Pilot Schedule

• Project Kickoff: 13-14 November 2012 • Preliminary Design: 18 January 2013 • Project Demonstration: 16 April 2013 • Project Complete: 26 April 2013

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Main Goals

• Support Hydrologic Modeling • Assessment of Nutrients Loading for Great Lakes (US and Canada)

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Hydrologic Modeling

Requires Integration of Stream flow and Groundwater Wells Requires Cross-border Integration of River Networks • US National Hydrography Dataset • Canada National Hydro Network (NHN)

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Data Integration for Hydrologic Modeling

Use OGC Web Feature Service (WFS) to find stream gauges and groundwater wells within an area of interest (bounding box)

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Data Integration for Hydrologic Modeling

Harvest sensor service metadata and gauge metadata and time-series last-value data and make it available via in a ebRIM Catalog Services for the Web (CSW).

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Data Integration for Hydrologic Modeling

Use Web Processing Service (WPS) to find US and Canadian upstream river segments from a point of interest.

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Data Integration for Hydrologic Modeling

Use Web Processing Service (WPS) to find and associate stream gauges and groundwater wells with upstream segments returned from the WPS upstream service.

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Data Integration for Hydrologic Modeling

Use Sensor Observation Service (SOS) GetDataAvailabilty (GDA) operation to retrieve time-series data for selected stream gauges and wells for applicable resources.

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Assessment of Nutrients Loading for Great Lakes (US and Canada)

• Integration of Great Lakes water quality data for US and Canada – USGS and EPA Water Quality Portal

services – Water Quality Exchange (WQX) data

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Assessment of Nutrients Loading for Great Lakes (US and Canada)

• Integrating with stream flow (calculating nutrient loads) – Locate and associate water quality

monitoring stations for a selected point of interest in the Great Lakes

– Retrieve nutrient values for identified upstream stations using SOS

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Assessment of Nutrients Loading for Great Lakes (US and Canada)

• Integrating with stream flow (calculating nutrient loads) – Use WPS to calculate nutrient loads for the

requested time period • Execute a simplified nutrient load calculation

model based on USGS Exploration for Graphics for River Trends (EGRET) for selected nutrients.

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OGC Pilots and Testbeds

I have not failed, I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work. Thomas Edison

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Interoperability program

• Over 40 initiatives have been successfully completed since 1999.

• Most OGC standards are advanced through this process.

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Iterative Standards Development

Interoperability  Program  

Standards  Program  

Marketing  and  Communications  

Program  

Engineering  Reports  Request  for  Changes  

Adopted  Standards  

Holes  and  Enhancements  

 Implementations  

Prototype  Implementations  

Requirements  

© 2012 Open Geospatial Consortium

Compliance  Program  

Abstract  Tests  

Test  Suites  Reference  

Implementations

Request  for  Changes  

CertiAication  

Adopted  Tests  

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Open Geospatial Consortium

Only world organization, with industry members, focusing

on location standards

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Who performs the work in an initiative?

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Questions?

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Luis  Bermudez,  Ph.D.  [email protected]  

@berdez  on  Twi<er  h<p://www.linkedin.com/in/bermudez  

 

CHISP Link: http://www.opengeospatial.org/projects/initiatives/chisp Becoming OGC member http://www.opengeospatial.org/ogc/join/levels


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