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Creators/Authors contains: "Pierce, Elizabeth"

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  1. A good performance monitoring system is crucial to knowing whether an organization's efforts are making their data capabilities better, the same, or worse. However, comprehensive performance measurements are costly. Organizations need to expend time, resources, and personnel to design the metrics, to gather evidence for the metrics, to assess the metrics' value, and to determine if any actions should be taken as a result of those metrics. Consequently organizations need to be strategic in selecting their portfolio of performance indicators for evaluating how well their data initiatives are producing value to the organization. This paper proposes a balanced scorecard approach to aid organizations in designing a set of meaningful and coordinated metrics for maximizing the potential of their data assets. This paper also discusses implementation challenges and the need for further research in this area. 
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  2. The Wilkes and Aurora basins are large, low‐lying sub‐glacial basins that may cause areas of weakness in the overlying East Antarctic ice sheet. Previous work based on ice‐rafted debris (IRD) provenance analyses found evidence for massive iceberg discharges from these areas during the late Miocene and Pliocene. Here we characterize the sediments shed from the inferred areas of weakness along this margin (94°E to 165°E) by measuring40Ar/39Ar ages of 292 individual detrital hornblende grains from eight marine sediment core locations off East Antarctica and Nd isotopic compositions of the bulk fine fraction from the same sediments. We further expand the toolbox for Antarctic IRD provenance analyses by exploring the application of40Ar/39Ar ages of detrital biotites; biotite as an IRD tracer eliminates lithological biases imposed by only analyzing hornblendes and allows for characterization of samples with low IRD concentrations. Our data quadruples the number of detrital40Ar/39Ar ages from this margin of East Antarctica and leads to the following conclusions: (1) Four main sectors between the Ross Sea and Prydz Bay, separated by ice drainage divides, are distinguishable based upon the combination of40Ar/39Ar ages of detrital hornblende and biotite grains and theεNdof the bulk fine fraction; (2)40Ar/39Ar biotite ages can be used as a robust provenance tracer for this part of East Antarctica; and (3) sediments shed from the coastal areas of the Aurora and Wilkes sub‐glacial basins can be clearly distinguished from one another based upon their isotopic fingerprints. 
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