The Minerals4EU Project is designed to meet the recommendations of the Raw Materials Initiative and will develop an EU Mineral intelligence network structure delivering a web portal, a European Minerals Yearbook and foresight studies. This presentations describes how the stakeholders can access the data delivered by the Project. More information about the Project is available at www.minerals4eu.eu
Minerals4EU - The EU-MKDP (Minerals Knowledge Data Platform) Minerals4EU
Daniel Cassard (BRGM) presented the Minerals Knowledge Data Platform (EU-MKDP) at the first international conference on Minerals in Circular Economy, Finland, 26-27 November 2014. Conference website: www.mince.fi
European Union Raw Materials Knowledge Base (EURMKB)Minerals4EU
Mr Mattia Pellegini (European Commission, DG Enterprise and Industry) presented the European Union Raw Materials Knowledge Base (EURMKB) at the Minerals4EU London Event 11 November 2014
Minerals Intelligence Network for Europe - Minerals4EUMinerals4EU
These slides, presented by Minerals4EU Scientific Coordinator Nikolaos Arvanitidis at the Minerals4EU Final Conference, gives an overview of the project and its achievements.
Minerals Intelligence Network for Europe - Minerals4EUMinerals4EU
These slides, presented by Minerals4EU Scientific Coordinator Nikolaos Arvanitidis at the Minerals4EU Final Conference, gives an overview of the project and its achievements.
Minerals4EU - European Intelligence Network on the Supply of Raw MaterialsMinerals4EU
The Minerals4EU Project is designed to meet the recommendations of the Raw Materials Initiative and will develop an EU Mineral intelligence network structure delivering a web portal, a European Minerals Yearbook and foresight studies. This presentation gives an overview of the Project. More information about the Project is available at www.minerals4eu.eu
The Minerals4EU Project is designed to meet the recommendations of the Raw Materials Initiative and will develop an EU Mineral intelligence network structure delivering a web portal, a European Minerals Yearbook and foresight studies. This presentations describes how the stakeholders benefit from the Project. More information about the Project is available at www.minerals4eu.eu
Minerals4EU - Delivering the European Minerals YearbookMinerals4EU
The European Minerals Yearbook was presented in a Stakeholder Workshop in Brussels 3 December 2014 by the Work Package 4 Team, lead by the British Geological Survey (BGS). More information about the Minerals4EU Project is available at www.minerals4eu.eu
Geoscience Data Transfers Standards: EarthResourceML and GeoSciML, tools to d...Minerals4EU
Jouni Vuollo (GTK) presented EarthResourceML and GeoSciML, tools to deliver mineral resources data in EU and globally, at the first international conference on Minerals in Circular Economy, Finland, 26-27 November 2014. Conference website: www.mince.fi
Minerals4EU - The EU-MKDP (Minerals Knowledge Data Platform) Minerals4EU
Daniel Cassard (BRGM) presented the Minerals Knowledge Data Platform (EU-MKDP) at the first international conference on Minerals in Circular Economy, Finland, 26-27 November 2014. Conference website: www.mince.fi
European Union Raw Materials Knowledge Base (EURMKB)Minerals4EU
Mr Mattia Pellegini (European Commission, DG Enterprise and Industry) presented the European Union Raw Materials Knowledge Base (EURMKB) at the Minerals4EU London Event 11 November 2014
Minerals Intelligence Network for Europe - Minerals4EUMinerals4EU
These slides, presented by Minerals4EU Scientific Coordinator Nikolaos Arvanitidis at the Minerals4EU Final Conference, gives an overview of the project and its achievements.
Minerals Intelligence Network for Europe - Minerals4EUMinerals4EU
These slides, presented by Minerals4EU Scientific Coordinator Nikolaos Arvanitidis at the Minerals4EU Final Conference, gives an overview of the project and its achievements.
Minerals4EU - European Intelligence Network on the Supply of Raw MaterialsMinerals4EU
The Minerals4EU Project is designed to meet the recommendations of the Raw Materials Initiative and will develop an EU Mineral intelligence network structure delivering a web portal, a European Minerals Yearbook and foresight studies. This presentation gives an overview of the Project. More information about the Project is available at www.minerals4eu.eu
The Minerals4EU Project is designed to meet the recommendations of the Raw Materials Initiative and will develop an EU Mineral intelligence network structure delivering a web portal, a European Minerals Yearbook and foresight studies. This presentations describes how the stakeholders benefit from the Project. More information about the Project is available at www.minerals4eu.eu
Minerals4EU - Delivering the European Minerals YearbookMinerals4EU
The European Minerals Yearbook was presented in a Stakeholder Workshop in Brussels 3 December 2014 by the Work Package 4 Team, lead by the British Geological Survey (BGS). More information about the Minerals4EU Project is available at www.minerals4eu.eu
Geoscience Data Transfers Standards: EarthResourceML and GeoSciML, tools to d...Minerals4EU
Jouni Vuollo (GTK) presented EarthResourceML and GeoSciML, tools to deliver mineral resources data in EU and globally, at the first international conference on Minerals in Circular Economy, Finland, 26-27 November 2014. Conference website: www.mince.fi
The presentation will give and overview of the DRDSI platform developed by EC
-
JRC together with
the DanubeNET expert group. The DRDSI represents a three year long project which has been a key
aspect of the JRC's scientific support to the European Strategy
for Danube Region (EUSDR). The
purpose of the presentation is also to give the Attractive Danube project partners the re
-
usable
source of data, information, services. Final part will provide examples of DRDSI impact within the
region, including the main o
utcomes from the DanubeHack 2.0 community event.
The Presentation of Hans-Jörg Lieder, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin – Preußischer Kulturbesitz, at the BnF Information Day for Europeana Newspapers (November 2014).
Part of the 21st Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA), hosted at the University of Glasgow in September 2015
http://eaaglasgow2015.com/
Vortrag im Rahmen der EERA-Session: Open Science and Educational Research? Inclusion and Exclusion at the European Open Science Cloud; am 5. September 2018 in Bolzano (Italien).
European Commission
DG Research and Innovation
RTD.A2. Open Data Policy and Science Cloud
Katarzyna Szkuta
At the recent UN-GGIM for the Arab States meeting in Jordan I presented on the current status of UN-GGIM: Europe activities. This is a high level presentation for information only.
agINFRA vision after the end of the projectAndreas Drakos
The agINFRA project (http://www.aginfra.eu) lasted from the October 2011 to February 2015. This presentation shows the vision for after the end of the project
V Międzynarodowa Konferencja Naukowa Nauka o informacji (informacja naukowa) w okresie zmian Innowacyjne usługi informacyjne. Wydział Dziennikarstwa, Informacji i Bibliologii Katedra Informatologii, Uniwersytet Warszawski, Warszawa, 15 – 16 maja 2017
The presentation will give and overview of the DRDSI platform developed by EC
-
JRC together with
the DanubeNET expert group. The DRDSI represents a three year long project which has been a key
aspect of the JRC's scientific support to the European Strategy
for Danube Region (EUSDR). The
purpose of the presentation is also to give the Attractive Danube project partners the re
-
usable
source of data, information, services. Final part will provide examples of DRDSI impact within the
region, including the main o
utcomes from the DanubeHack 2.0 community event.
The Presentation of Hans-Jörg Lieder, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin – Preußischer Kulturbesitz, at the BnF Information Day for Europeana Newspapers (November 2014).
Part of the 21st Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA), hosted at the University of Glasgow in September 2015
http://eaaglasgow2015.com/
Vortrag im Rahmen der EERA-Session: Open Science and Educational Research? Inclusion and Exclusion at the European Open Science Cloud; am 5. September 2018 in Bolzano (Italien).
European Commission
DG Research and Innovation
RTD.A2. Open Data Policy and Science Cloud
Katarzyna Szkuta
At the recent UN-GGIM for the Arab States meeting in Jordan I presented on the current status of UN-GGIM: Europe activities. This is a high level presentation for information only.
agINFRA vision after the end of the projectAndreas Drakos
The agINFRA project (http://www.aginfra.eu) lasted from the October 2011 to February 2015. This presentation shows the vision for after the end of the project
V Międzynarodowa Konferencja Naukowa Nauka o informacji (informacja naukowa) w okresie zmian Innowacyjne usługi informacyjne. Wydział Dziennikarstwa, Informacji i Bibliologii Katedra Informatologii, Uniwersytet Warszawski, Warszawa, 15 – 16 maja 2017
Presentation of SEMIC on StatDCAT-AP at SemStats 2016 conference.
Demonstration on StatDCAT-AP which aims at enhancing interoperability between descriptions of statistical data sets within the statistical domain and between statistical data (e.g. Eurostat) and open data portals (e.g. European Data Portal).
The incorporation of numeric models and simulations onto GIS platforms will answer existing and developing problems of increasing complexity. This can be described as a move from analysis of what is happening to what will happen, or what could happen, and why. Some examples of this type of predictive modelling are: diagnostics and forecasts on shoreline erosion, land uses and their risk assessments, or control of human presence in natural areas. It will also be necessary to combine the simulations to aggregate output for enhanced decision support.
The platform is within the scope of the PIKSEL project, started in 2020 by the Catalan government and CIMNE to develop a system to support territorial management and decision support.
The primary motivation of the platform is the social interconnection of researchers, via the interoperability of content, numerical models and simulations. Models are specifically designed for a function, and like any software, there is no rule or methodology for creating them. Models are extremely heterogeneous, almost all are coded and constructed differently, differing in operating systems, hardware platforms, programming languages, inputs and outputs, and interfaces, with varied requirements, languages, inputs, outputs, measurements and formats. Harmonization of models has been a long sought goal, so that users would be able to combine models with ease, and faces distinct challenges to enact, as detailed by Zhang et al., 2018.
It is required to develop a manner allow ingress of new content, as well as inventory and access mechanisms. This is practical; the development of content (e.g. models, scripts, data) is time consuming and opening the platform for external participation is essential. The ecommerce component will function as a catalog and portal to the PIKSEL platform.
The objective of this investigation is to create a content management system with ecommerce capabilities for a platform as a service (PaaS) that utilizes computational models in addition to data. Said CMS will allow interoperability between resources for aggregated output.
BDE-SC1 Webinar: OpenPHACTS Re-engineered with Big Data EuropeBigData_Europe
Watch this webinar on YouTube: https://youtu.be/MwG0yhrctDs
Slides for the latest update on our Big Data Europe pilot in Societal Challenge 1: Health, Demographic Change and Wellbeing.
Last year we successfully completed the first phase of this pilot, replicating the functionality of the Open PHACTS Discovery Platform on the BDE infrastructure. The Open PHACTS Discovery Platform brings together pharmacological data resources in an integrated, interoperable infrastructure, and has been developed to reduce barriers to drug discovery for industry, academia, and small businesses.
Learn more about the progress we’ve made, and what’s coming next.
1. General overview of the Big Data Europe project and Societal Challenges it addresses (Ronald Siebes, VU Amsterdam)
2. The Big Data Europe infrastructure, generic components that are being developed, and their flexibility for different applications (Hajira Jabeen, University of Bonn)
3. Latest details of the current state of the Open PHACTS architecture in BDE, and ongoing work (Nick Lynch, CTO, Open PHACTS Foundation)
European Data Portal - ePSI platform webinar 8 February 2016EuropeanDataPortal
All presentations given during the ePSI platform webinar that was held on 8 February 2016.
The agenda of the webinar:
1) Opening by the European Commission.
2) Introduction to the EDP project
3) Demo of the Portal
4) Technical architecture
5) Focus on CKAN extensions developed
6) Focus on maps application
7) Next steps
8) Discussion and tips & tricks for open data implementation
Big Data Europe at eHealth Week 2017: Linking Big Data in HealthBigData_Europe
Of the four V's of big data – Volume, Velocity, Variety and Veracity – the most challenging for the health sector is Variety. Health data comes from many sources, formats and standards – how can we bring these together to reap the benefits of big data technologies?
Big Data Europe is tackling this challenge head-on, building a big data infrastructure flexible enough to tackle all seven Societal Challenges identified by Horizon 2020. Here we demonstrate our pilot implementation of Open PHACTS, which integrates life science data for drug discovery.
12 May 2017
BigDataEurope: Project Introduction @ Year #1 WorkshopsBigData_Europe
An overview of the BDE project's objective, as presented in the introduction (with some variations) in each of the 1st Year series of workshops (seven: one per societal challenge).
Workshop #1 Year Schedule available at: http://www.big-data-europe.eu/first-round-of-bigdataeurope-workshops-announced/
Enabling Data-Intensive Science Through Data InfrastructuresLIBER Europe
These slides are from a talk given at LIBER's 42nd annual conference by Carlos Morais Pires of the European Commission.
In light of the current data deluge, and plans by the European Commission to harness this deluge through the implementation of e-infrastructures for data driven science under Horizon 2020, Pires issued a call to action to libraries to engage in the data infrastructure and bring their own unique, and now much needed competencies, to bear in bringing meaning to, and spreading the word about, data-driven science.
Presented during the Research Data Alliance's 11th Plenary in Berlin, Germany, the EOSC-hub project, through this presentation, gave an overview on the project and how it will contribute to the development of the European Open Science Cloud. Moreover, it also gives a more comprehensive rundown of services that will be made available through EOSC-hub
Presentation: BigDataEurope, by Martin Kaltenböck, Semantic Web Company (Austria), at the European Data Economy Workshop taking place back to back to SEMANTiCS2015 on 15 September 2015 in Vienna
The Open Data movement is now moving a step forward, many governments, institutions and business have recently started the process of making information available to citizens and customers. Data is now seen as a powerful instrument to increase transparency in public administration and business on policies. About 80% of this information has a spatial component that is not entirely exploited yet. A range of open source solutions are now available to address this challenge, in this session we will explore their potential and possible applications. The so-called “data deluge” is here.. but we can build good umbrellas.
Drupal Day 2011 - Thinking spatially with your open dataDrupalDay
Talk di Juan Arevalo & Marco Giacomassi | Drupal Day Roma 2011
The Open Data movement is now moving a step forward, many governments, institutions and business have recently started the process of making information available to citizens and customers. Data is now seen as a powerful instrument to increase transparency in public administration and business on policies. About 80% of this information has a spatial component that is not entirely exploited yet. A range of open source solutions are now available to address this challenge, in this session we will explore their potential and possible applications. The so-called “data deluge” is here.. but we can build good umbrellas. Please come to learn more about it!
Nucleophilic Addition of carbonyl compounds.pptxSSR02
Nucleophilic addition is the most important reaction of carbonyls. Not just aldehydes and ketones, but also carboxylic acid derivatives in general.
Carbonyls undergo addition reactions with a large range of nucleophiles.
Comparing the relative basicity of the nucleophile and the product is extremely helpful in determining how reversible the addition reaction is. Reactions with Grignards and hydrides are irreversible. Reactions with weak bases like halides and carboxylates generally don’t happen.
Electronic effects (inductive effects, electron donation) have a large impact on reactivity.
Large groups adjacent to the carbonyl will slow the rate of reaction.
Neutral nucleophiles can also add to carbonyls, although their additions are generally slower and more reversible. Acid catalysis is sometimes employed to increase the rate of addition.
hematic appreciation test is a psychological assessment tool used to measure an individual's appreciation and understanding of specific themes or topics. This test helps to evaluate an individual's ability to connect different ideas and concepts within a given theme, as well as their overall comprehension and interpretation skills. The results of the test can provide valuable insights into an individual's cognitive abilities, creativity, and critical thinking skills
ESR spectroscopy in liquid food and beverages.pptxPRIYANKA PATEL
With increasing population, people need to rely on packaged food stuffs. Packaging of food materials requires the preservation of food. There are various methods for the treatment of food to preserve them and irradiation treatment of food is one of them. It is the most common and the most harmless method for the food preservation as it does not alter the necessary micronutrients of food materials. Although irradiated food doesn’t cause any harm to the human health but still the quality assessment of food is required to provide consumers with necessary information about the food. ESR spectroscopy is the most sophisticated way to investigate the quality of the food and the free radicals induced during the processing of the food. ESR spin trapping technique is useful for the detection of highly unstable radicals in the food. The antioxidant capability of liquid food and beverages in mainly performed by spin trapping technique.
The Evolution of Science Education PraxiLabs’ Vision- Presentation (2).pdfmediapraxi
The rise of virtual labs has been a key tool in universities and schools, enhancing active learning and student engagement.
💥 Let’s dive into the future of science and shed light on PraxiLabs’ crucial role in transforming this field!
DERIVATION OF MODIFIED BERNOULLI EQUATION WITH VISCOUS EFFECTS AND TERMINAL V...Wasswaderrick3
In this book, we use conservation of energy techniques on a fluid element to derive the Modified Bernoulli equation of flow with viscous or friction effects. We derive the general equation of flow/ velocity and then from this we derive the Pouiselle flow equation, the transition flow equation and the turbulent flow equation. In the situations where there are no viscous effects , the equation reduces to the Bernoulli equation. From experimental results, we are able to include other terms in the Bernoulli equation. We also look at cases where pressure gradients exist. We use the Modified Bernoulli equation to derive equations of flow rate for pipes of different cross sectional areas connected together. We also extend our techniques of energy conservation to a sphere falling in a viscous medium under the effect of gravity. We demonstrate Stokes equation of terminal velocity and turbulent flow equation. We look at a way of calculating the time taken for a body to fall in a viscous medium. We also look at the general equation of terminal velocity.
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
on Io’s surface have been monitored from both spacecraft and ground-based telescopes.
Here, we present the highest spatial resolution images of Io ever obtained from a groundbased telescope. These images, acquired by the SHARK-VIS instrument on the Large
Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
optics at visible wavelengths.
Toxic effects of heavy metals : Lead and Arsenicsanjana502982
Heavy metals are naturally occuring metallic chemical elements that have relatively high density, and are toxic at even low concentrations. All toxic metals are termed as heavy metals irrespective of their atomic mass and density, eg. arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium, thallium, chromium, etc.
Comparing Evolved Extractive Text Summary Scores of Bidirectional Encoder Rep...University of Maribor
Slides from:
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Track: Artificial Intelligence
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
The use of Nauplii and metanauplii artemia in aquaculture (brine shrimp).pptxMAGOTI ERNEST
Although Artemia has been known to man for centuries, its use as a food for the culture of larval organisms apparently began only in the 1930s, when several investigators found that it made an excellent food for newly hatched fish larvae (Litvinenko et al., 2023). As aquaculture developed in the 1960s and ‘70s, the use of Artemia also became more widespread, due both to its convenience and to its nutritional value for larval organisms (Arenas-Pardo et al., 2024). The fact that Artemia dormant cysts can be stored for long periods in cans, and then used as an off-the-shelf food requiring only 24 h of incubation makes them the most convenient, least labor-intensive, live food available for aquaculture (Sorgeloos & Roubach, 2021). The nutritional value of Artemia, especially for marine organisms, is not constant, but varies both geographically and temporally. During the last decade, however, both the causes of Artemia nutritional variability and methods to improve poorquality Artemia have been identified (Loufi et al., 2024).
Brine shrimp (Artemia spp.) are used in marine aquaculture worldwide. Annually, more than 2,000 metric tons of dry cysts are used for cultivation of fish, crustacean, and shellfish larva. Brine shrimp are important to aquaculture because newly hatched brine shrimp nauplii (larvae) provide a food source for many fish fry (Mozanzadeh et al., 2021). Culture and harvesting of brine shrimp eggs represents another aspect of the aquaculture industry. Nauplii and metanauplii of Artemia, commonly known as brine shrimp, play a crucial role in aquaculture due to their nutritional value and suitability as live feed for many aquatic species, particularly in larval stages (Sorgeloos & Roubach, 2021).
The use of Nauplii and metanauplii artemia in aquaculture (brine shrimp).pptx
Minerals4EU - The Minerals Knowledge Data Platform (EU-MKDP)
1. Minerals4EU - WP5
The EU-MKDP (Minerals Knowledge Data Platform)
System architecture, objectives, services
London Event, Grant Thornton UK, November 11, 2014
Daniel Cassard and the WP5 Team
BRGM, CGS, GeoZS, GEUS, GTK, JRC and TNO
2. Content
The objectives, the technical choices, our contribution, the future…
Our objectives
Technical choices: why?
What do we bring to the community? Are we in competition with other
Internet data providers?
The EU-MKDP is a first step. Other projects currently running and the very near
future
Concluding remark
3. Our objectives
The EU-MKDP represents one of the first bricks of the future European geological
data infrastructure. The proposed technical solutions assure an effective and
sustainable system designed for facilitating data updates and maintenance, and
for offering you a full and seamless access to information related to the whole
mineral resources value chain.
The system is thus designed to accommodate:
- Structured data from national databases and
- Semi- and non-structured information: syntheses and statistics (graph charts
and time-series), related to primary and secondary resources ( exploration,
production, reserves and resources), exploitation technologies, end-product
development and waste management practices, European market survey
and raw material demand… in various formats (text files, PDF files, images…).
4. General simplified architecture of the EU-MKDP
Non-, semi- & structured /
standardized information related to
MR & wastes: knowledge extraction,
indexation…
Documents
& Metadata
Web
Services
REE
Info
MR
Info
Web
Services
EU-MKDP Web Portal
New knowledge produced by partners from
other work packages
Information Factory
data filtering, advanced search,
statistics computing,
report generation
Layers
Web
Services
Pertinent available layers
from geological surveys
and EU projects and
other institutions (e.g.,
geographic, geological,
geophysical,
geochemical maps)
Based on OGC/
Implementing
… Y
Rules for
Services and
X
… YY
XX
Web
Services
Web
Services
Web
Services
INSPIRE
Web
Services
Data
Web
Services
Web Services
Other agencies, institutes,
professional associations…, able to
provide structured data
Structured data provided by
geological surveys
A sustainable system
always kept up to
date: adoption
and development of
a distributed
architecture.
A system fully
INSPIRE
compliant:
based on INSPIRE
v.3 and
EarthResourceML
(ERML) v.2 data
models.
5. General simplified architecture of the EU-MKDP
Non-, semi- & structured /
standardized information related to
MR & wastes: knowledge extraction,
indexation…
Documents
& Metadata
Web
Services
REE
Info
MR
Info
Web
Services
EU-MKDP Web Portal
New knowledge produced by partners from
other work packages
Information Factory
data filtering, advanced search,
statistics computing,
report generation
Layers
Web
Services
Pertinent available layers
from geological surveys
and EU projects and
other institutions (e.g.,
geographic, geological,
geophysical,
geochemical maps)
Based on OGC/
Implementing
… Y
Rules for
Services and
X
… YY
XX
Web
Services
Web
Services
Web
Services
INSPIRE
Web
Services
Data
Web
Services
Web Services
Other agencies, institutes,
professional associations…, able to
provide structured data
Structured data provided by
geological surveys
Management of:
- Non-structured
data, always
accompanied by
their metadata
- Structured data
A Central
Database to
minimize the
drawbacks of the
distributed
architecture:
improves the
performance,
reduces the risk
in case of server
crash
6. EU-MKDP detailed architecture
Based on a « production-diffusion schema »
MICKA Catalog
Harvesting
mechanism
(ETL process)
EU-MKDP Web Portal
INFORMATION FACTORY
(CS/W)
Mapping (ETL process and code lists)
Provider’s own format
Harvesting DB
(+ quality control)
Web
Services
Project DB
Diffusion DB
(+ diffusion optimizations)
Documents
& Metadata
Web Services
(WMS/WFS)
Web Services
(Search engine)
Web Services
(Stats, auto report, filtering…)
DB SYNCHRONIZATION
Standardized data models
(INSPIRE MR, ERML)
Web
Services
National DB
Provider DB
Web
Services
National DB
Provider DB
Indexation
Provider DB
Deegree 3
A professional
architecture: A
Central Harvesting
Database
synchronized with
a Central Diffusion
Database. The first
one controls data
quality and the
second one is
optimized for
diffusion.
Synchronization is
made using SQL
scripts.
EU level
Country
level
7. Technical choices – other features
The EU-MKDP Web Portal
An Editorial: latest news of the EU-MKDP and information on the use of the web portal.
A Map Viewer will present the data inside the Diffusion Database, and will allow the
user to combine them with other data (geological map, consumption area...). This Map
Viewer will support INSPIRE View Services, will propose a predefined layers list, a metadata
catalogue dedicated to Minerals4EU (MICKA), a connection to other catalogues (One
Geology-Europe, INSPIRE...) and external layers (OGC WMS). Some of the basic (statistics,
reports...) and dedicated services will be integrated in the Map Viewer.
The Search facilities will allow the user to search in the Diffusion Database, in some
other databases (manually plugged into the Indexation Engine) and in documents added
to the EU-MKDP using a dedicated interface. The user will be able to search (i) using full
text or (ii) using a specific interface dedicated to the concept he is looking for. It will be
possible to refine all these searches by adding a location (Diffusion Database, documents
or both).
8. The diffusion system (summary)
4 parts (front office)
Editorial (1)
Map Viewer (2)
Search (3)
Services (in progress)
1 part (back office)
Documents management
http://minerals4eu.brgm-rec.fr
(1)
(2)
(3)
(3)
+ a dedicated viewer for a
dynamic presentation of
the e-Mineral Yearbook
and foresight studies
9. Technical choices – the services
Services on top of the Central Diffusion Database, accessible through the EU-MKDP
‘Basic’ services: data filtering, advanced search, statistics computing, automatic
report generation.
Dedicated services, some answering to the most common/frequent queries (with
possible storage of results in the Central Diffusion Database): e.g., LREE/HREE
computation, extraction - using mineralogy - of all deposits containing REE (indicated or
NOT in the commodity list) for a better definition of mining districts/provinces.
‘On request’ services based on Geological Surveys’ know-how/expertise
Services with a substantial added-value, not automated, tailored to meet specific
demands from industry, EC, governmental agencies and other potential end users (e.g.,
dedicated metallogenic /potential maps, predictive maps…).
10. What do we bring? Are we in competition with
other Internet data providers?
Most of the Internet data providers collect, standardize and disseminate all
relevant corporate, financial, market and M&A data — plus news and analysis
— for industries like metals & mining.
We are partly dealing with the same data (e.g., project/mine status,
exploration, production and grades, reserves and resources…) but our goal is
to provide the investor, the decision-maker or the stakeholder with the
capability (i) to produce in a seamless way his own analysis combining several
types of data and (ii) to search for and exploit pertinent syntheses (e.g., the e-
Minerals Yearbook [WP4] and foresight studies [WP6]).
We are covering the whole value chain, putting notably at the end user
disposal all the geological and metallogenic knowledge necessary to
evaluate ongoing mining projects (potential of the area, potential of
development…)
No competition, but complementarity
11. EURARE
IKMS (REE)
Minerals4EU
EU-MKDP
ProSUM
The EU-UMKDP: Mining
wastes, WEEE, ELVs, Batteries
Raw materials intelligence
capacity: Database of models &
tools (MFA, LCA, 3D-4D…),
ontology-based selection tool
REMIND
Responsible Mining
Demonstrations
EUMINET
European Minerals
Information Network
H2020
EIP-RM
COMMITMENTS
Strong
synergy
One of the first
bricks of the EGDI
Building on
Minerals4EU
and extending
the EU-MKDP
Looking toward
the near future
Addresses EIP-SIP
II.C Priority Area –
Action area II.8: The
EURMKB
Adding new bricks
12. Thanks a lot for your attention!
Developing the EU-MKDP
architecture will contribute to
lay the foundations of an
effective and lasting system
designed to accommodate
various data sets related to
raw materials, make easier
their visualization and their use
and facilitate data updates
and maintenance.