Acronym: AON
Geolocation: Arctic Ocean
Acronym: AON
Geolocation: Arctic Ocean
Acronym: ASCOS
Geolocation: High Arctic Ocean (87degs N, 1-6degs E)
Year: 2008

Acronym: BASIN
Geolocation: North Atlantic basin and associated shelf-seas
Acronym: BoCP
Geolocation: Global
Acronym: CoML
Geolocation: global
Year: 2001
Acronym: C-CoMP
Geolocation: North Atlantic, BATS, global/other
Year: 2021

Acronym: C-DEBI
Geolocation: Global
Year: 2010

Acronym: Coastal SEES
Geolocation: US
Year: 2013
Acronym: CAMEO
Year: 2008
Acronym: COBRA
Geolocation: global
Year: 2021
Acronym: Dimensions of Biodiversity
Geolocation: global
Year: 2010
Acronym: ETBC
Geolocation: global
Year: 2007
Acronym: EXPORTS

Acronym: Geobiology & Low-Temp Geochem
Year: 2022
Acronym: GeoMICS
Geolocation: Northeast Pacific Ocean: 48.5N 126W
Year: 2012
Acronym: GO-SHIP
Geolocation: Global Ocean
Year: 2007
Acronym: GCR
Geolocation: global

Acronym: GoMX - DHOS
Geolocation: Northern Gulf of Mexico
Year: 2009

Acronym: GWA
Geolocation: Gulf of Alaska

Acronym: Historical
Geolocation: global
Keyword Searches
Keyword searches are parsed into a series of terms and operators.
Terms can be a single word — plankton or carbon — or a phrase surrounded by double quotes — "ocean acidification"
Operators allow you to customize the text search in the following ways:
Wildcards
Wildcard searches can be run on individual terms, using:
? to replace a single character:
carbon?te
* to replace zero or more characters:,
ocean acid*
Boolean Operators
The preferred operators are:
+ (this term must be present)
- (this term must not be present)
"coral calcification" +biota -pacific
- biota must be present
- pacific must not be present
- "coral calcification" is optional - its presense increases the relevance
Fuzzy Matching
We can search for terms that are similar to, but not exactly like our search terms, using the "fuzzy" operator: ~. This uses the Damerau-Levenshtein distance to find all terms with a maximum of two changes, where a change is the insertion, deletion or substitution of a single character, or transposition of two adjacent characters. The default edit distance is 2, but you can specify the distance:
"carbon"~3
Proximity Searches
While a phrase query (eg "john smith") expects all of the terms in exactly the same order, a proximity query allows the specified words to be further apart or in a different order. In the same way that fuzzy queries can specify a maximum edit distance for characters in a word, a proximity search allows us to specify a maximum edit distance of words in a phrase:
"primary production"~3