Automated Author Profile

Taub, Liba

Cambridge University

Current S-Index

3.3

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

1.7

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

2

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

76.9%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

0

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Data of Ancient Greek Parapegmata (Version: 1)

In ancient Greece, calendrical lists of significant weather events are today called "parapegmata" (Graßhoff, Gerd 2017). They are aligned with the seasonal change of the sun's course and correlate the weather events with visible horizon phenomena of the rising and setting stars at dawn and twilight (Taub, Liba 2003). These so-called "heliacal risings and settings" of the brightest stars mark exactly a seasonally fixed day during the year when a particular star becomes visible near the horizon for the first or last time before a time of invisibility due to proximity to the sun. The heliacal rising and setting phenomena marked the seasonal calendars for early cultures. This data publication is a comprehensive machine readable edition of the content of the main historic parapegmata as JSON files.

Authors

  • Graßhoff, Gerd ;
  • Kotschka, Florian ;
  • Taub, Liba ;
  • Rinner, Elisabeth ;
  • Sum, Jessica
0 Citations0 Mentions77% FAIR1.7 Dataset Index
10.5281/zenodo.45456772021

Data of Ancient Greek Parapegmata (Version: 1)

In ancient Greece, calendrical lists of significant weather events are today called "parapegmata" (Graßhoff, Gerd 2017). They are aligned with the seasonal change of the sun's course and correlate the weather events with visible horizon phenomena of the rising and setting stars at dawn and twilight (Taub, Liba 2003). These so-called "heliacal risings and settings" of the brightest stars mark exactly a seasonally fixed day during the year when a particular star becomes visible near the horizon for the first or last time before a time of invisibility due to proximity to the sun. The heliacal rising and setting phenomena marked the seasonal calendars for early cultures. This data publication is a comprehensive machine readable edition of the content of the main historic parapegmata as JSON files.

Authors

  • Graßhoff, Gerd ;
  • Kotschka, Florian ;
  • Taub, Liba ;
  • Rinner, Elisabeth ;
  • Sum, Jessica
0 Citations0 Mentions77% FAIR1.7 Dataset Index
10.5281/zenodo.45456762021