Pages that link to "Item:Q45882"
From geokb
The following pages link to Amy East (Q45882):
Displayed 50 items.
- Colored shaded-relief bathymetric map and surrounding aerial imagery of Whiskeytown Lake, California (Q55611) (← links)
- The response of source-bordering aeolian dunefields to sediment-supply changes 2: Controlled floods of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA (Q144941) (← links)
- The response of source-bordering aeolian dunefields to sediment-supply changes 1: Effects of wind variability and river-valley morphodynamics (Q144942) (← links)
- Reply to ‘Wolf-triggered trophic cascades and stream channel dynamics in Olympic National Park: a comment on East et al. (2017)’ by Robert Beschta and William Ripple (Q145295) (← links)
- Removal of San Clemente Dam did more than restore fish passage (Q145498) (← links)
- Case study: Thomas Fire (Q149225) (← links)
- Refining the Baseline Sediment Budget for the Klamath River, California (Q149517) (← links)
- Fires, floods and other extreme events – How watershed processes under climate change will shape our coastlines (Q150242) (← links)
- Warming-driven erosion and sediment transport in cold regions (Q150466) (← links)
- Measuring and attributing sedimentary and geomorphic responses to modern climate change: Challenges and opportunities (Q150606) (← links)
- Channel-planform evolution in four rivers of Olympic National Park, Washington, U.S.A.: The roles of physical drivers and trophic cascades (Q152585) (← links)
- Dam removal: Listening in (Q156241) (← links)
- Geomorphic responses to dam removal in the United States – a two-decade perspective (Q156314) (← links)
- A regime shift in sediment export from a coastal watershed during a record wet winter, California: Implications for landscape response to hydroclimatic extremes (Q157455) (← links)
- River response to large‐dam removal in a Mediterranean hydroclimatic setting: Carmel River, California, USA (Q157457) (← links)
- Flooding duration and volume more important than peak discharge in explaining 18 years of gravel–cobble river change (Q157471) (← links)
- Six years of fluvial response to a large dam removal on the Carmel River, California, USA (Q157479) (← links)
- Post-Fire Sediment Research at the Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center (Q226804) (← links)
- Assessing River Erosion and Sedimentation in Ecuador (Q226898) (← links)
- Klamath Dam Removal Studies (Q227194) (← links)
- Sediment Transport in Coastal Environments (Q227291) (← links)
- Landscape Response to Disturbance (Q227303) (← links)
- Coastal watershed and estuary restoration in the Monterey Bay area (Q227340) (← links)
- USGS science supporting the Elwha River Restoration Project (Q227719) (← links)
- Geomorphic evolution of a gravel‐bed river under sediment‐starved vs. sediment‐rich conditions: River response to the world's largest dam removal (Q255536) (← links)
- Quantifying and forecasting changes in the areal extent of river valley sediment in response to altered hydrology and land cover (Q256196) (← links)
- Slope failure and mass transport processes along the Queen Charlotte Fault, southeastern Alaska (Q256750) (← links)
- Linking fluvial and aeolian morphodynamics in the Grand Canyon, USA (Q257861) (← links)
- Commentary: Variability in shelf sedimentation in response to fluvial sediment supply and coastal erosion over the past 1,000 Years in Monterey Bay, CA, United States (Q258438) (← links)
- Watershed sediment yield following the 2018 Carr Fire, Whiskeytown National Recreation Area, northern California (Q265015) (← links)
- Slope failure and mass transport processes along the Queen Charlotte Fault Zone, western British Columbia (Q273170) (← links)
- Shifted sediment-transport regimes by climate change and amplified hydrological variability in cryosphere-fed rivers (Q276553) (← links)
- Detrital U-Pb zircon dating of lower Ordovician syn-arc-continent collision conglomerates in the Irish Caledonides (Q277481) (← links)
- Linking mesoscale meteorology with extreme landscape response: Effects of narrow cold frontal rainbands (NCFR) (Q277728) (← links)
- A watershed moment for western U.S. dams (Q279015) (← links)
- Fire (plus) flood (equals) beach: Coastal response to an exceptional river sediment discharge event (Q280252) (← links)
- 21st-century stagnation in unvegetated sand-sea activity (Q282546) (← links)
- Cobble cam: Grain-size measurements of sand to boulder from digital photographs and autocorrelation analyses (Q284740) (← links)
- Midwinter dry spells amplify post-fire snowpack decline (Q287734) (← links)
- Postfire hydrologic response along the central California (USA) coast: Insights for the emergency assessment of postfire debris-flow hazards (Q288641) (← links)
- Sediment transport and deposition (Q289188) (← links)
- Post-fire sediment yield from a central California watershed: Field measurements and validation of the WEPP model (Q290953) (← links)
- Late Pleistocene to Holocene sedimentation and hydrocarbon seeps on the continental shelf of a steep, tectonically active margin, southern California, USA (Q292646) (← links)
- Arc-continent collision and the formation of continental crust: A new geochemical and isotopic record from the Ordovician Tyrone Igneous Complex, Ireland (Q294658) (← links)
- Geomorphic and sedimentary effects of modern climate change: Current and anticipated future conditions in the western United States (Q299549) (← links)
- Sedimentation processes in a coral reef embayment: Hanalei Bay, Kauai (Q304808) (← links)
- Major fluvial erosion and a 500-Mt sediment pulse triggered by lava-dam failure, Río Coca, Ecuador (Q308661) (← links)
- Morphodynamic evolution following sediment release from the world’s largest dam removal (Q310068) (← links)
- Archaeological sites in Grand Canyon National Park along the Colorado River are eroding owing to six decades of Glen Canyon Dam operations (Q310434) (← links)
- Conceptualizing ecological responses to dam removal: If you remove it, what's to come? (Q313043) (← links)