The following pages link to Thomas G Huntington, Ph.D. (Q46873):
Displayed 50 items.
- Small watershed studies: Analytical approaches for understanding ecosystem response to environmental change (Q143573) (← links)
- Historical changes in lake ice-out dates as indicators of climate change in New England, 1850-2000 (Q143701) (← links)
- Historical trend in the ratio of solid to total precipitation (Q144357) (← links)
- Climate change, growing season length, and transpiration: Plant response could alter hydrologic regime (Q144461) (← links)
- Dynamic replacement and loss of soil carbon on eroding cropland (Q144825) (← links)
- Evidence for major input of riverine organic matter into the ocean (Q145393) (← links)
- The evolving perceptual model of streamflow generation at the Panola Mountain Research Watershed (Q146184) (← links)
- Simulation of dissolved organic carbon flux in the Penobscot Watershed, Maine (Q146234) (← links)
- An increase in the slope of the concentration-discharge relation for total organic carbon in major rivers in New England, 1973 to 2019 (Q146264) (← links)
- Past and future changes in climate and hydrological indicators in the US Northeast (Q147069) (← links)
- Evapotranspiration trends over the eastern United States during the 20th century (Q147885) (← links)
- Character change of New England snow (Q148608) (← links)
- Analysis of the Arctic system for freshwater cycle intensification: Observations and expectations (Q148679) (← links)
- Climate and hydrological changes in the northeastern United States: recent trends and implications for forested and aquatic ecosystems (Q148899) (← links)
- Changes in the global water cycle (Q149053) (← links)
- Northern forest winters have lost cold, snowy conditions that are important for ecosystems and human communities (Q149421) (← links)
- Redistribution of soil nitrogen, carbon and organic matter by mechanical disturbance during whole-tree harvesting in northern hardwoods (Q152000) (← links)
- Status of soil acidification in North America (Q152158) (← links)
- Evidence for intensification of the global water cycle: Review and synthesis (Q152388) (← links)
- Hydrologic processes controlling sulfate mobility in a small forested watershed (Q152482) (← links)
- Climate change and dissolved organic carbon export to the Gulf of Maine (Q153290) (← links)
- The potential for calcium depletion in forest ecosystems of southeastern United States: Review and analysis (Q153442) (← links)
- Controls on soil respiration: implications for climate change (Q153483) (← links)
- Historical trend in river ice thickness and coherence in hydroclimatological trends in Maine (Q154217) (← links)
- Climate warming could reduce runoff significantly in New England, USA (Q154235) (← links)
- Changes in the timing of high river flows in New England over the 20th Century (Q154347) (← links)
- Are there spurious temperature trends in the United States Climate Division database? (Q154410) (← links)
- Modeling carbon dynamics in vegetation and soil under the impact of soil erosion and deposition (Q154433) (← links)
- Effects of acidic deposition on water quality and forest health in Georgia (Q155297) (← links)
- Toward a quantitative and empirical dissolved organic carbon budget for the Gulf of Maine, a semienclosed shelf sea (Q155864) (← links)
- Controls on dissolved organic carbon quantity and chemical character in temperate rivers of North America (Q157807) (← links)
- Climate Change, Hydrologic Responses and Impacts on Carbon Cycling as Inferred by Changes in Fluvial Dissolved Organic Carbon Fluxes (Q228575) (← links)
- Calcium depletion in a Southeastern United States forest ecosystem (Q236050) (← links)
- Mercury remediation in wetland sediment using zero-valent iron and granular activated carbon (Q238097) (← links)
- Export of dissolved organic carbon from the Penobscot River basin in north-central Maine (Q245058) (← links)
- Step-changes in the physical, chemical and biological characteristics of the Gulf of Maine, as documented by the GNATS time series (Q245745) (← links)
- Identifying fluorescent pulp mill effluent in the Gulf of Maine and its watershed (Q246035) (← links)
- Changes in the number and timing of days of ice-affected flow on northern New England rivers, 1930-2000 (Q249378) (← links)
- Summer low flows in New England during the 20th Century (Q249747) (← links)
- Assessment of calcium status in Maine forests: Review and future projection (Q249884) (← links)
- Can nitrogen sequestration explain the unexpected nitrate decline in New Hampshire streams? (Q250129) (← links)
- Can we dismiss the effect of changes in land‐based water storage on sea‐level rise? (Q252953) (← links)
- CO2‐induced suppression of transpiration cannot explain increasing runoff (Q253019) (← links)
- Differential rates of feldspar weathering in granitic regoliths (Q256057) (← links)
- Soil: Organic Matter and Available Water Capacity (Q256308) (← links)
- Climate warming-induced intensification of the hydrologic cycle: A review of the published record and assessment of the potential impacts on agriculture (Q257622) (← links)
- Trends in precipitation, runoff, and evapotranspiration for rivers draining to the Gulf of Maine in the United States (Q257904) (← links)
- Bibliography of research papers that are consistent with hydrologic responses to ongoing systematic changes in climate (Q258553) (← links)
- Book review: Carbon sequestration in soils: Science monitoring and beyond: Conference proceedings: St. Micheals Workshop, Maryland, December 3–5, 1998, NJ: Rosenberg, N.J. (Q264009) (← links)
- Changing climate, changing forests: the impacts of climate change on forests of the northeastern United States and eastern Canada (Q266703) (← links)