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EIC one year anniversary content update #119
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merging directly into main per #116 |
Is it possible to enable deploy previews for PRs into main? |
find */carousel_content.json -type f -exec sed -i '' "s/go to /go to /" {} +
✅ Deploy Preview for earth-information-center ready!
To edit notification comments on pull requests, go to your Netlify site configuration. |
stories/theme.BIO.introduction_biodiversity/carousel_content.json
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stories/theme.GHG.introduction_greenhouse_gases/carousel_content.json
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Looks like a lot of videos are private/unavailable. |
Good call on the videos being private, it turns out I hadn't finished uploading them to Youtube (just... don't ever use their API, just don't do it-- just do whatever you're trying to do manually and take a couple of shots beforehand, it will be more consistent). Went ahead and put ## Agriculture back to ## Info, I think that's when I discovered the link-out stubs had content in them and that the content was being duplicated on the same page: @agurvich see live site: https://earth.gov/stories/agriculture |
Co-authored-by: Slesa Adhikari <[email protected]>
…nt.json Co-authored-by: Slesa Adhikari <[email protected]>
remove bold tag
Co-authored-by: Slesa Adhikari <[email protected]>
@agurvich let me know when it's ready for review again :) |
should be ready now! i made all the changes you suggested |
},{ | ||
"src":"https://www.youtube.com/embed/B7n62jOJJqI", | ||
"title":"Atlantic Hurricane Wind Speed Plots", | ||
"caption":"These simple visualizations are plots of time vs. wind speed for each tropical storm/hurricane of Atlantic Hurricane seasons from 1950 to the present. Horizontal lines indicate wind speed category thresholds. A line plot for each storm shows the storm's name and a marker at the peak wind speed.<p>\n\nMost named storms during the Atlantic hurricane season happen between June and November. However, occasionally, storms develop outside of those ranges.\n\nFour versions of the plots are inluded:\n 1. May to December showig only the current year\n 2. May to December showing the current year and strong storms from previous years (ghosted out)\n 3. January to December showig only the current year\n 4. January to December showing the current year and strong storms from previous years (ghosted out)\n \nThe plot for the current year automatically updates every 2 hours during hurricane season.\nVisualizations by: Greg Shirah\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5072" |
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"caption":"These simple visualizations are plots of time vs. wind speed for each tropical storm/hurricane of Atlantic Hurricane seasons from 1950 to the present. Horizontal lines indicate wind speed category thresholds. A line plot for each storm shows the storm's name and a marker at the peak wind speed.<p>\n\nMost named storms during the Atlantic hurricane season happen between June and November. However, occasionally, storms develop outside of those ranges.\n\nFour versions of the plots are inluded:\n 1. May to December showig only the current year\n 2. May to December showing the current year and strong storms from previous years (ghosted out)\n 3. January to December showig only the current year\n 4. January to December showing the current year and strong storms from previous years (ghosted out)\n \nThe plot for the current year automatically updates every 2 hours during hurricane season.\nVisualizations by: Greg Shirah\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5072" | |
"caption":"These simple visualizations are plots of time vs. wind speed for each tropical storm/hurricane of Atlantic Hurricane seasons from 1950 to the present. Horizontal lines indicate wind speed category thresholds. A line plot for each storm shows the storm's name and a marker at the peak wind speed. \n\nMost named storms during the Atlantic hurricane season happen between June and November. However, occasionally, storms develop outside of those ranges.\n\nFour versions of the plots are inluded:\n 1. May to December showing only the current year\n 2. May to December showing the current year and strong storms from previous years (ghosted out)\n 3. January to December showing only the current year\n 4. January to December showing the current year and strong storms from previous years (ghosted out)\n \nThe plot for the current year automatically updates every 2 hours during hurricane season.\nVisualizations by: Greg Shirah\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5072" |
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removed <p>
},{ | ||
"src":"https://www.youtube.com/embed/2xxjiu0C_-Q", | ||
"title":"ODIAC: a map of human made carbon dioxide emissions", | ||
"caption":"The Open-source Data Inventory for Anthropogenic CO2 (A.K.A. ODIAC) is a global high-resolution (1x1km) emission data product for fossil fuel carbon dioxide (CO2) emission. ODIAC was originally designed and developed under the Greenhouse gas Observing SATellite (GOSAT) project at Japan\u2019s National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES). Since then, ODIAC has been maintained at the Universities Space Research Association (USRA) in collaboration with NASA, NIES and the Appalachian State University. ODIAC pioneered the combined use of space-based nighttime light data and individual power plant emission/location profiles to estimate the global spatial extent of fossil fuel CO2 emissions. ODIAC has been a key input data for NASA\u2019s carbon modeling. ODIAC has been also widely used in the international science research community for a variety of applications across key policy relevant scales (global to local).\nVisualizations by: Mark SubbaRao, Scientific consulting by: Tomohiro Oda\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5121" |
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"caption":"The Open-source Data Inventory for Anthropogenic CO2 (A.K.A. ODIAC) is a global high-resolution (1x1km) emission data product for fossil fuel carbon dioxide (CO2) emission. ODIAC was originally designed and developed under the Greenhouse gas Observing SATellite (GOSAT) project at Japan\u2019s National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES). Since then, ODIAC has been maintained at the Universities Space Research Association (USRA) in collaboration with NASA, NIES and the Appalachian State University. ODIAC pioneered the combined use of space-based nighttime light data and individual power plant emission/location profiles to estimate the global spatial extent of fossil fuel CO2 emissions. ODIAC has been a key input data for NASA\u2019s carbon modeling. ODIAC has been also widely used in the international science research community for a variety of applications across key policy relevant scales (global to local).\nVisualizations by: Mark SubbaRao, Scientific consulting by: Tomohiro Oda\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5121" | |
"caption":"The Open-source Data Inventory for Anthropogenic CO₂ (A.K.A. ODIAC) is a global high-resolution (1x1km) emission data product for fossil fuel carbon dioxide (CO₂) emission. ODIAC was originally designed and developed under the Greenhouse gas Observing SATellite (GOSAT) project at Japan\u2019s National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES). Since then, ODIAC has been maintained at the Universities Space Research Association (USRA) in collaboration with NASA, NIES and the Appalachian State University. ODIAC pioneered the combined use of space-based nighttime light data and individual power plant emission/location profiles to estimate the global spatial extent of fossil fuel CO₂ emissions. ODIAC has been a key input data for NASA\u2019s carbon modeling. ODIAC has been also widely used in the international science research community for a variety of applications across key policy relevant scales (global to local).\nVisualizations by: Mark SubbaRao, Scientific consulting by: Tomohiro Oda\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5121" |
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Subscripted 2
{ | ||
"src":" https://www.youtube.com/embed/TvPjAe4j6qQ", | ||
"title":"Global Sea Surface Currents and Temperature", | ||
"caption":"This visualization shows sea surface current flows. The flows are colored by corresponding sea surface temperature data. This visualization is rendered for display on very high resolution devices like hyperwalls or for print media.<p><p>This visualization was produced using model output from the joint MIT/JPL project entitled Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean, Phase II (ECCO2) (http://ecco2.org/). ECCO2 uses the MIT general circulation model (MITgcm) to synthesize satellite and in-situ data of the global ocean and sea-ice at resolutions that begin to resolve ocean eddies and other narrow current systems, which transport heat and carbon in the oceans. The ECCO2 model simulates ocean flows at all depths, but only surface flows are used in this visualization.\nVisualizations by: Greg Shirah\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/3912" |
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"caption":"This visualization shows sea surface current flows. The flows are colored by corresponding sea surface temperature data. This visualization is rendered for display on very high resolution devices like hyperwalls or for print media.<p><p>This visualization was produced using model output from the joint MIT/JPL project entitled Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean, Phase II (ECCO2) (http://ecco2.org/). ECCO2 uses the MIT general circulation model (MITgcm) to synthesize satellite and in-situ data of the global ocean and sea-ice at resolutions that begin to resolve ocean eddies and other narrow current systems, which transport heat and carbon in the oceans. The ECCO2 model simulates ocean flows at all depths, but only surface flows are used in this visualization.\nVisualizations by: Greg Shirah\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/3912" | |
"caption":"This visualization shows sea surface current flows. The flows are colored by corresponding sea surface temperature data. This visualization is rendered for display on very high resolution devices like hyperwalls or for print media. This visualization was produced using model output from the joint MIT/JPL project entitled Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean, Phase II (ECCO2) (http://ecco2.org/). ECCO2 uses the MIT general circulation model (MITgcm) to synthesize satellite and in-situ data of the global ocean and sea-ice at resolutions that begin to resolve ocean eddies and other narrow current systems, which transport heat and carbon in the oceans. The ECCO2 model simulates ocean flows at all depths, but only surface flows are used in this visualization.\nVisualizations by: Greg Shirah\nFor more information or to download this public domain video, go to https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/3912" |
The third video in the carousel is still private - https://deploy-preview-119--earth-information-center.netlify.app/stories/biodiversity 7th one here https://deploy-preview-119--earth-information-center.netlify.app/stories/sea_level_rise 4th one here https://deploy-preview-119--earth-information-center.netlify.app/stories/water_resources |
Saw some other inconsistencies - created a PR for them #121 |
The SLR video needed to be re-uploaded (for some reason...) but the other two are working for me at: https://www.youtube.com/embed/ImEdEQtuDkI https://www.youtube.com/embed/wp7WpoRtL8E in an incognito window. Can you confirm they're still broken for you (can you click open in new tab and send me the videoID if so?) |
@agurvich they're working now. |
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LGTM
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