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The Product Catalog Data provides a comprehensive overview of products across various categories. This dataset includes detailed product titles, descriptions, barcodes, category-specific attributes, weight, measurements, and imagery. It's tailored for marketplaces, eCommerce sites, and data analysts who require in-depth product information to enhance user experience, SEO, and product categorization.
Popular Attributes:
✔ Detailed product information
✔ High-quality imagery
✔ Extensive attribute coverage
✔ Ideal for UX and SEO optimization
✔ Comprehensive product categorization
Key Information:
Rich dataset with 30+ attributes per product
Pricing: Flexible subscription models
Update Frequency: Daily updates
Coverage: Global and specific markets
Historical Data: 12 Months +
The list includes only farm product liens that have not lapsed - ORS 80.118. To access liens up to one year past the lapse date, use the UCC Seach
The NHTSA Product Information Catalog and Vehicle Listing (vPIC) is a consolidated platform that presents data collected within the manufacturer reported data from CFR 49 Parts 551 - 574 for use in a variety of modern tools. NHTSA's vPIC platform is intended to serve as a centralized source for basic Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) decoding, Manufacturer Information Database (MID), Manufacturer Equipment Plant Identification and associated data. vPIC is intended to support the Open Data and Transparency initiatives of the agency by allowing the data to be freely used by the public without the burden of manual retrieval from a library of electronic documents (PDFs). While these documents will still be available online for viewing within the Manufacturer Information Database (MID) module of vPIC one can view and use the actual data through the VIN Decoder and Application Programming Interface (API) modules.
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984 Active Global Products Catalog buyers list and Global Products Catalog importers directory compiled from actual Global import shipments of Products Catalog.
A list of individual public APIs maintained by the US government.
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Provide the collection statistics of the National Public Information Library from 2016 to 2023 for reference, including the number of collections of books, non-book materials, and digital collections.
The XRAY database table contains selected parameters from almost all HEASARC X-ray catalogs that have source positions located to better than a few arcminutes. The XRAY database table was created by copying all of the entries and common parameters from the tables listed in the Component Tables section. The XRAY database table has many entries but relatively few parameters; it provides users with general information about X-ray sources, obtained from a variety of catalogs. XRAY is especially suitable for cone searches and cross-correlations with other databases. Each entry in XRAY has a parameter called 'database_table' which indicates from which original database the entry was copied; users can browse that original table should they wish to examine all of the parameter fields for a particular entry. For some entries in XRAY, some of the parameter fields may be blank (or have zero values); this indicates that the original database table did not contain that particular parameter or that it had this same value there. The HEASARC in certain instances has included X-ray sources for which the quoted value for the specified band is an upper limit rather than a detection. The HEASARC recommends that the user should always check the original tables to get the complete information about the properties of the sources listed in the XRAY master source list. This master catalog is updated periodically whenever one of the component database tables is modified or a new component database table is added. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
A JSON export of the GSA IT Standards Profile.
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The Catalogue of Life is an assembly of expert-based global species checklists with the aim to build a comprehensive catalogue of all known species of organisms on Earth. Continuous progress is made towards completion, but for now, it probably includes just over 80% of the world’s known species. The Catalogue of Life estimates 2.3M extant species on the planet recognised by taxonomists at present time. This means that for many groups it continues to be deficient, and users may notice that many species are still missing from the Catalogue. ### What's new in 2025 Annual Checklist? #### New global checklists: * AntCat replaced family Formicidae from ITIS _(3 updates)_ * Háva's Catalogue: World catalogue of selected Coleoptera families (Derodontidae) * ITIS new global checklists for ladybird beetle tribe Epilachnini & genus Rhyzobius in Coccinellidae family) _(12 updates)_ * LPSN Prokaryotic Nomenclature Up-to-Date (PNU) replaced ITIS Archaea & Bacteria _(2 updates)_ * SF Permopsocida _(3 updates)_ * WoRMS Mysidacea: World List of Lophogastrida, Stygiomysida and Mysida replaced order Mysida from ITIS and added new global checklists for crustacean orders Stygiomysida and †Pygocephalomorpha _(3 updates)_ #### 113 checklists have been updated in year cycle: * 3i Auchenorrhyncha _(11 updates)_ * Alucitoidea _(3 updates)_ * Bryonames _(3 updates)_ * CCW _(2 updates)_ * Collembola.org * Entiminae _(11 updates)_ * FishBase via Aphia at VLIZ * Gelechiidae _(7 updates)_ * GLI _(9 updates)_ * Global Gracillariidae _(5 updates)_ * Hepialidae _(2 updates)_ * ICTV MSL _(2 updates)_ * ITIS _(12 updates)_ * LWS fleas * Pterophoroidea _(6 updates)_ * Scarabs _(12 updates)_ * Sesiidae _(6 updates)_ * SF Aphid _(10 updates)_ * SF Chrysididae _(11 updates)_ * SF Coleorrhyncha _(2 updates)_ * SF Coreoidea _(11 updates)_ * SF Dermaptera _(11 updates)_ * SF Embioptera _(8 updates)_ * SF Grylloblattodea _(2 updates)_ * SF Grylloblattodea * SF Isoptera _(11 updates)_ * SF Lygaeoidea _(11 updates)_ * SF Mantodea _(11 updates)_ * SF Mantophasmatodea _(2 updates)_ * SF Orthoptera _(11 updates)_ * SF Phasmida _(11 updates)_ * SF Plecoptera _(11 updates)_ * SF Psocodea _(11 updates)_ * SF Zoraptera _(2 updates)_ * Systema Dipterorum _(3 updates)_ * The Scorpion Files * TITAN _(2 updates)_ * Tortricid.net * UCD * WCO _(11 updates)_ * WCVP-Fabaceae * WFO Pinopsida * WLoC * WOL _(11 updates)_ * World Ferns _(7 updates)_ * World Plants _(5 updates)_ * WoRMS, 66 checklists _(11 updates)_ * WSC #### Other changes: * Coleoptera management classification has been updated according to _Coleoptera type genera and family-group names_ by P. Bouchard, 2024 (_digital resource in the Checklistbank_).
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6440 Active Global Catalog buyers list and Global Catalog importers directory compiled from actual Global import shipments of Catalog.
Although they are the main constituents of the Galactic disk population, for half of the open clusters in the Milky Way reported in the literature nothing is known except the raw position and an approximate size. The main goal of this study is to determine a full set of uniform spatial, structural, kinematic, and astrophysical parameters for as many known open clusters as possible. On the basis of stellar data from PPMXL and 2MASS, the authors used a dedicated data-processing pipeline to determine kinematic and photometric membership probabilities for stars in a cluster region. For an input list of 3,784 targets from the literature, they confirm that 3,006 are real objects, the vast majority of them are open clusters, but associations and globular clusters are also present. For each confirmed object, the authors determined the exact position of the cluster center, the apparent size, proper motion, distance, color excess, and age. For about 1,500 clusters, these basic astrophysical parameters have been determined for the first time. For the bulk of the clusters the authors also derived the tidal radii. In addition, they estimated average radial velocities for more than 30% of the confirmed clusters. The present sample (called MWSC) reaches both the central parts of the Milky Way and its outer regions. It is almost complete up to 1.8 kpc from the Sun and also covers the neighboring spiral arms. However, for a small subset of the oldest open clusters (ages more than ~ 1 Gyr), the authors found some evidence of incompleteness within about 1 kpc from the Sun. This table contains the list of 3,006 Milky Way stellar clusters (MWSC) found in the 2MAst (2MASS with Astrometry) catalog presented in Paper II of this series (these clusters have source numbers below 4000), together with an additional 139 new open clusters (these clusters have source numbers between 5000 and 6000) found by the authors at high Galactic latitudes (|b_II_| > 18.5 degrees) which were presented in Paper III of the series, and an additional 63 new open clusters (these clusters have source numbers between 4000 and 5000) which were presented in Paper IV of the series. The target list in Paper II from which the 3,006 open clusters was contained was compiled on the basis of present-day lists of open, globular and candidate clusters. The list of new high-latitude open clusters in Paper III was obtained from a target list of 714 density enhancements found using the 2MASS Catalog. The list of new open clusters in Paper IV was obtained from an initial list of 692 compact cluster candidates which were found by the authors by conducting an almost global search of the sky (they excluded the portions of the sky with |b_II_| < 5 degrees) in the PPMXL and the UCAC4 proper-motion catalogs. For confirmed clusters, the authors determined a homogeneous set of astrophysical parameters such as membership, angular radii of the main morphological parts, mean cluster proper motions, distances, reddenings, ages, tidal parameters, and sometimes radial velocities. This table was created by the HEASARC in February 2014 based on the list of open clusters given in CDS Catalog J/A+A/558/A53 files catalog.dat and notes.dat. It was updated in September 2014 with 139 additional star clusters from CDS Catalog J/A+A/568/A51 files catalog.dat and notes.dat. It was further updated in October 2015 with 63 additional star clusters from CDS Catalog J/A+A/581/A39 files catalog.dat and notes.dat. Note that this table does not include the information on candidates which turned out not to be open clusters which was also contained in these catalogs. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
Oregon’s 17 Community Colleges cover 60 campuses and centers throughout the state. This dataset includes the current list of all courses offered by a community college. Course information is subject to change; please contact your local community college for course confirmation.
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26 Active Global Printed catalog suppliers, manufacturers list and Global Printed catalog exporters directory compiled from actual Global export shipments of Printed catalog.
This catalog, also called the Finding List (FL) of Interacting Binaries (5th edition), was abstracted from the Card Catalog maintained at the University of Florida which contains information on all published, and to the extent available, unpublished work on eclipsing binaries. The Card Catalog originated with Raymond Smith Dugan in the 1930's, who published from it the first edition of "A Finding List for Observers of Eclipsing Variables" (Dugan 1934, Princeton Univ. Obs. Contrib. No. 15). Successive editions of FL were subsequently published by Pierce (1947, Princeton Univ. Obs. Contrib. No. 22), by Wood (1953, Univ. Pennsylvania Astron. Series, Vol. VIII), by Koch et al. (1963, Univ. Pennsylvania Astron. Series, Vol. IX), and by Wood et al. (1980, Univ. Pennsylvania Astron. Series, Vol. XII). The FL was conceived as an aid to observers of eclipsing variables in selecting an observing program efficiently from the collection of all known data in an easy-to-use format. Although this format has changed over the years to meet existing requirements, the basic information content remains the same. The current edition differs from previous ones in the extension of the magnitude limit at minimum light from 13 to 15. In earlier editions, a binary system was not included unless the editors were reasonably certain that the system was indeed an eclipsing or (rarely) an ellipsoidal variable. The fifth edition includes all systems that the editors were fairly certain are either eclipsing or radiometrically variable binaries. The catalog fields are Finding List number; star name; position (given in the original catalog in equinox 1900); blue magnitude at maximum light; bandpass of maximum light; depth of primary minimum in same bandpass; bandpass primary minimum; depth of secondary minimum and its bandpass; spectral class of star eclipsed at primary light and optional uncertainty character; spectral class of star eclipsed at secondary light; most recent reliable epoch of primary minimum; most recent orbital period; duration of primary minimum; duration of totality of primary minimum; BD, CoD, CPD, and HD number; alternate designations of system; and codes indicating the nature of the system. This database was created by the HEASARC in December 1997 based on a computer readable version of the catalog that was obtained from the CDS (their catalog VI/44): a few additions were made by the HEASARC that are listed in the HEASARC_Changes section of the present document. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
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Provide the quantity and geographic distribution information of the national archives catalog.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Moving Object Catalog 3rd release lists astrometric and photometric data for moving objects detected in the SDSS. The catalog includes various identification parameters, SDSS astrometric measurements (five SDSS magnitudes and their errors), and orbital elements for previously cataloged asteroids. The data set also includes a list of the runs from which data are included, and filter response curves.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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List of articles on products found in the It's Your Health bulletin, a series of topical and brief publications produced by Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada for the public, media and special interest groups
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Simulated earthquake catalog, generated with the Rate-State Earthquake Simulator (RSQSim), described in and used by the following publication:
Kevin R. Milner, Bruce E. Shaw, Christine A. Goulet, Keith B. Richards‐Dinger, Scott Callaghan, Thomas H. Jordan, James H. Dieterich, Edward H. Field; Toward Physics‐Based Nonergodic PSHA: A Prototype Fully Deterministic Seismic Hazard Model for Southern California. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 2021;; 111 (2): 898–915. doi: https://doi.org/10.1785/0120200216
The catalog is simulated on the UCERF3 fault system for California (https://doi.org/10.1785/0120130164), following the hybrid loading technique described in Shaw (2019) (https://doi.org/10.1785/0120180128).
File Descriptions:
Catalog CSV Files: catalog.csv, catalog_m6.5.csv
These are human-readable summary files listing each event (after skipping the first 65kyrs of model spin-up time). The "catalog_m6.5.csv" file is filtered for only M>6.5 events (those used Milner et al., 2021). Each line corresponds to an event in the catalog, and contains the following information:
Geometry File (ASCII): geometry.flt
ASCII file listing patch (triangular) geometry for the simulated faults in a UTM coordinate system (zone 11S). The primary columns are:
The first line in the file (excluding comment lines that start with '#') is the patch with ID=1, the second ID=2, etc. Additional metadata columns may exist in each line beyond those listed and can be ignored.
Catalog List Files (binary): catalog.eList, catalog.pList, catalog.tList, catalog.dList
The raw output of RSQSim includes 4 binary "list" files that define the simulated event IDs, times, and total slip in each participating patch. All 4 list files should be processed together, as the N-th item in one list file corresponds to the N-th item in each other file.
For each patch the ruptures during an event, a value is written to each of these files giving 1) the patch number, 2) the event number, 3) the distance slipped during the event, and 4) the time of first rupture for that patch during that event.
The format is as follows:
RSQSim Input File (ASCII): params.in
Key-value pairs of RSQSim model parameters, used to originally run the simulation.
M>6.5 Rupture Slip-Time Histories (Standard Rupture Format): srfs_m6.5.zip
Rupture slip-time histories in the Standard Rupture Format, version 1.0 (see http://equake-rc.info/static/paper/SRF-Description-Graves_2.0.pdf), used in Milner et al. (2021). Slip-time histories are discretized at 0.1s intervals, and represented in the WGS84 coordinate system.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
List of entities that provide Digital Subscriber Line services but do not provide the telephone lines over which that service is delivered.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Categorization was required by the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (CEPA 1999) and is a first step to finding out which of these chemical substances require further attention in the form of assessment, research and/or measures to control their use or release. This task was completed by September 2006, as required by the act. Using information from Canadian industry, academic research and other countries, Government of Canada scientists worked with partners in applying a set of rigorous tools to the 23,000 chemical substances on the Domestic Substances List (DSL). They were categorized to identify those that were: Inherently toxic to humans or to the environment and that might be: Persistent (take a very long time to break down), and/or Bioaccumulative (collect in living organisms and end up in the food chain) Substances to which people might have greatest potential for exposure. Through categorization, the Government of Canada identified approximately 4,000 of the 23,000 chemical substances on the DSL as meeting the criteria for further attention.
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The Product Catalog Data provides a comprehensive overview of products across various categories. This dataset includes detailed product titles, descriptions, barcodes, category-specific attributes, weight, measurements, and imagery. It's tailored for marketplaces, eCommerce sites, and data analysts who require in-depth product information to enhance user experience, SEO, and product categorization.
Popular Attributes:
✔ Detailed product information
✔ High-quality imagery
✔ Extensive attribute coverage
✔ Ideal for UX and SEO optimization
✔ Comprehensive product categorization
Key Information:
Rich dataset with 30+ attributes per product
Pricing: Flexible subscription models
Update Frequency: Daily updates
Coverage: Global and specific markets
Historical Data: 12 Months +