(:source :version 3 :ip-name "ridgisd.er.usgs.gov" :tcp-port 210 :database-name "/usr/opt/wais/db/esdd" :cost 0.00 :cost-unit :free :maintainer "tgauslin@ridgisd" :description "Server created with WAIS release 8 b3.1 on Mar 17 09:43:46 1992 by tgauslin@ridgisd WHAT IS ESDD? The Earth Science Data Directory (ESDD) is being developed by the U.S. Geological Survey as a system for readily determining the availability of specific earth-science and natural-resource data. It offers access to a USGS computer repository of information about earth-science and natural-resource data bases. ESDD is also available on compact disc. Its referenced data bases are both automated and non-automated, and they belong to many different entities. ESDD participants include governmental agencies, academic institutions, and those from the private sector. The term \"earth-science and natural-resource data,\" as used for ESDD, is an all-embracing term referring to any systematic body of knowledge, automated or not, relating to the Earth, its environment and its energy, mineral, water, land, plant, animal, and other resources. ESDD can enable users to locate everything from complex computerized indices, systems, and files to paper records, maps, and files. Data bases referenced in ESDD include those concerned with the geologic, hydrologic, cartographic, and biologic sciences. References to data bases that support the protection and management of natural resources are also included. Geographic, sociologic, economic, and demographic data bases are among those cataloged. Arctic region data base entries are included in the Arctic Environment Data Directory as an ESDD subset. ESDD is the repository of information on Department of the Interior data bases related to interagency global change activities. May of this full range of data sources offer potential as leads to base and/or overlay input for geographic information system (GIS) applications. Also, ESDD includes some references to GIS product data bases. SEARCHING ESDD USING WAIS ESDD may be searched using all of the traditional methods offered by WAIS. In addition, several extensions to traditional WAIS searching are offered. Boolean \"and\". Seed words used to search ESDD may include the word \"and\". When a list of search words includes the \"and\" connector, only those documents that include the word following \"and\" will be retained for further evaluation. \"And\" connected words should be listed at the end of a search phrase. \"And\" may be used more than once. For example, the search phrase \"water, river and basin\" will locate documents containing the following word combinations: water and basin river and basin water, river and basin Phrase searches. Phrases may be included in ESDD searches by placing the phrase within double quotation marks. For example, to find only those documents that contain the word river immediately followed by the word basin, the phrase \"river basin\" may be used. Formatted text searches ESDD entries are provided in a formatted text format. This means that each entry contains standardized lead lines that describe various attributes of the referenced data. Searches may be restricted to identify only those documents that contain a word or phrase in a particular portion of the document. For example, only those documents including the word arctic in the keywords section of a document may be selected by including k=arctic in the user provided query. Phrase and keyword searching may be combined by placing the entire phrase, including the keyword prefix, within quotation marks: \"k=river basin\" The following prefixes may be used to search particular portions of ESDD documents: Sensor: s= Discipline: d= Keywords: k= Location: l= Parameter: p= Of course, omission of the prefix invokes the WAIS standard full text search. Location searches. A variation of keyword searching may be used to locate references using location coordinates (latitude and longitude). Many ESDD entries include the description of a bounded rectangle that provides the location described by the data. These references may be located by describing a point or rectangle that intersects the areas described by references. The keywords \"lat\" and \"lon\" are used for this purpose. For example, to locate references to ground water that exist at latitude 30 North by longitude 40 West, the following query might be entered: \"ground water\" and lat=30n and lon=40w " ) .