Pages that link to "Item:Q48352"
From geokb
The following pages link to Jim E O'Connor (Q48352):
Displayed 50 items.
- Historical and paleoflood analyses for probabilistic flood-hazard assessments—Approaches and review guidelines (Q55910) (← links)
- Improving flood-frequency analysis with a 4,000-year record of flooding on the Tennessee River near Chattanooga, Tennessee (Q56156) (← links)
- Prehistoric floods on the Tennessee River—Assessing the use of stratigraphic records of past floods for improved flood-frequency analysis (Q58144) (← links)
- Geomorphic and vegetation processes of the Willamette River floodplain, Oregon: current understanding and unanswered science questions (Q60714) (← links)
- Geologic map of the Washougal quadrangle, Clark County, Washington, and Multnomah County, Oregon (Q60819) (← links)
- Channel change and bed-material transport in the Umpqua River basin, Oregon (Q62726) (← links)
- Flood-frequency analyses from paleoflood investigations for Spring, Rapid, Boxelder, and Elk Creeks, Black Hills, western South Dakota (Q62740) (← links)
- Estimation of bed-material transport in the lower Chetco River, Oregon, water years 2009-2010 (Q63030) (← links)
- Channel change and bed-material transport in the Umpqua River basin, Oregon (Q63412) (← links)
- Channel change and bed-material transport in the Lower Chetco River, Oregon (Q63978) (← links)
- Channel change and bed-material transport in the Lower Chetco River, Oregon (Q64708) (← links)
- Preliminary assessment of vertical stability and gravel transport along the Umpqua River, southwestern Oregon (Q64967) (← links)
- Geologic map of the Camas Quadrangle, Clark County, Washington, and Multnomah County, Oregon (Q65751) (← links)
- The world's largest floods, past and present: Their causes and magnitudes (Q70102) (← links)
- Large floods in the United States: where they happen and why (Q71045) (← links)
- Origin, extent, and thickness of quaternary geologic units in the Willamette Valley, Oregon (Q73479) (← links)
- James Dwight Dana and John Strong Newberry in the US Pacific Northwest: The roots of American fluvialism (Q145002) (← links)
- Computational fluid dynamics simulations of the Late Pleistocene Lake Bonneville flood (Q145003) (← links)
- The Portland Basin: A (big) river runs through it (Q148943) (← links)
- The Bonneville Flood—A veritable débâcle (Q153034) (← links)
- Geomorphic responses to dam removal in the United States – a two-decade perspective (Q156314) (← links)
- Pacific Northwest Geologic Mapping: Northern Pacific Border, Cascades and Columbia (Q227639) (← links)
- Geomorphology of the Sprague River Basin (Q230050) (← links)
- Plugs or flood-makers? the unstable landslide dams of eastern Oregon (Q234146) (← links)
- River network and reach‐scale controls on habitat for lamprey larvae in the Umpqua River Basin, Oregon (Q253227) (← links)
- Spatial distribution of the largest rainfall‐runoff floods from basins between 2.6 and 26,000 km2 in the United States and Puerto Rico (Q254418) (← links)
- Arc versus river: The geology of the Columbia River Gorge (Q260669) (← links)
- Major reorganization of the Snake River modulated by passage of the Yellowstone Hotspot (Q267094) (← links)
- The Missoula and Bonneville floods—A review of ice-age megafloods in the Columbia River basin (Q267314) (← links)
- Outburst floods (Q267430) (← links)
- Owyhee River intracanyon lava flows: does the river give a dam? (Q268012) (← links)
- Preface to historic and paleoflood analyses: New perspectives on climate, extreme flood risk, and the geomorphic effects of large floods (Q271495) (← links)
- Many monstrous Missoula floods down channeled scabland and Columbia Valley, Washington (Q272642) (← links)
- Diverse cataclysmic floods from Pleistocene glacial Lake Missoula (Q279483) (← links)
- Luminescence dating of paleolake deltas and glacial deposits in Garwood Valley, Antarctica: Implications for climate, Ross ice sheet dynamics, and paleolake duration (Q281959) (← links)
- Impacts of a Cascadia subduction zone earthquake on water levels and wetlands of the lower Columbia River and Estuary (Q285194) (← links)
- Glacier-related outburst floods (Q289401) (← links)
- Outburst floods provide erodability estimates consistent with long-term landscape evolution (Q292219) (← links)
- 10Be dating of late Pleistocene megafloods and Cordilleran Ice Sheet retreat in the northwestern United States (Q292273) (← links)
- A 4500-year record of large floods on the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon, Arizona (Q292752) (← links)
- Age of the late Holocene Bonneville landslide and submerged forest of the Columbia River Gorge, Oregon and Washington, USA, by radiocarbon dating (Q294438) (← links)
- Quantitative paleoflood hydrology (Q296811) (← links)
- The magmatic origin of the Columbia River Gorge, USA (Q303223) (← links)
- Methods for predicting peak discharge of floods caused by failure of natural and constructed earthen dams (Q303324) (← links)
- Eroding Cascadia— Sediment and solute transport and landscape denudation in western Oregon and northwestern California (Q308620) (← links)
- Conceptualizing ecological responses to dam removal: If you remove it, what's to come? (Q313043) (← links)
- A far-traveled basalt lava flow in north-central Oregon, USA (Q313837) (← links)
- Orthophotograph of the Columbia River between Portland and The Dalles, Oregon, acquired in 1935 (Q319487) (← links)
- High-Resolution Aeromagnetic Survey Over Cascade Locks, Oregon, and Surrounding Areas (Q319568) (← links)
- Field, Geochemical, Geochronological, and Magnetic Data from a Pliocene basalt flow along the Deschutes River in north-central Oregon (Q320117) (← links)