Geomagnetic Observatory Annual Means Data

The NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (formerly National Geophysical Data Center) / World Data Center, Boulder maintains an active database of worldwide geomagnetic observatory data. Historically, magnetic observatories were established to monitor the secular change (variation), of the Earth's magnetic field, and this remains one of their most important functions. This generally involves absolute measurements sufficient in number to monitor instrumental drift and to produce annual means. While the current global network of geomagnetic observatories involves over 70 countries operating more than 200 observatories, the historic database includes observations from more than 600 observatories since the early 1800s. The magnetic observatory data are crucial to the studies of secular change, investigations into the Earth's interior, navigation, communication, and to global modeling efforts. The Earth's magnetic field is described by seven parameters. These are declination (D), inclination (I), horizontal intensity (H), vertical intensity (Z), total intensity (F) and the north (X) and east (Y) components of the horizontal intensity. By convention, declination is considered positive when measured east of north, inclination and vertical intensity positive down, X positive north, and Y positive east. The magnetic field observed on Earth is constantly changing.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Field Value
access_constraints ["Use Constraints: Please site the providers of the data when using these data.", "Access Constraints: This data is in the public domain and freely accessible."]
bbox-east-long 180.0
bbox-north-lat 89.0
bbox-south-lat -89.0
bbox-west-long -180.0
coupled-resource []
dataset-reference-date [{"type": "publication", "value": "2006-01-01"}]
frequency-of-update annually
guid gov.noaa.ngdc.stp.geomag:G10118
licence []
metadata-date 2015-09-18
metadata-language eng; USA
metadata_type geospatial
progress underDevelopment
resource-type dataset
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-180.0, -89.0], [180.0, -89.0], [180.0, 89.0], [-180.0, 89.0], [-180.0, -89.0]]]}
spatial_harvester true
temporal-extent-begin 1813-01-01
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • ckan
  • earth-science
  • geo
  • geomagnetism
  • geoss
  • magnetic-declination
  • magnetic-field
  • magnetic-inclination
  • magnetic-intensity
  • national
  • north-america
  • reference-fields
  • solar-activity
  • solid-earth
  • sun-earth-interactions
  • united-states
isopen False
metadata_created 2025-11-20T08:30:46.132095
metadata_modified 2025-11-20T08:30:46.132100
notes The NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (formerly National Geophysical Data Center) / World Data Center, Boulder maintains an active database of worldwide geomagnetic observatory data. Historically, magnetic observatories were established to monitor the secular change (variation), of the Earth's magnetic field, and this remains one of their most important functions. This generally involves absolute measurements sufficient in number to monitor instrumental drift and to produce annual means. While the current global network of geomagnetic observatories involves over 70 countries operating more than 200 observatories, the historic database includes observations from more than 600 observatories since the early 1800s. The magnetic observatory data are crucial to the studies of secular change, investigations into the Earth's interior, navigation, communication, and to global modeling efforts. The Earth's magnetic field is described by seven parameters. These are declination (D), inclination (I), horizontal intensity (H), vertical intensity (Z), total intensity (F) and the north (X) and east (Y) components of the horizontal intensity. By convention, declination is considered positive when measured east of north, inclination and vertical intensity positive down, X positive north, and Y positive east. The magnetic field observed on Earth is constantly changing.
num_resources 0
num_tags 18
title Geomagnetic Observatory Annual Means Data