All Stories

  1. Drivers influencing streamflow changes in the Upper Turia basin, Spain
  2. Hillslope-scale experiment demonstrates the role of convergence during two-step saturation
  3. A Global Land Cover Climatology Using MODIS Data
  4. Hillslope experiment demonstrates role of convergence during two-step saturation
  5. What makes Darwinian hydrology "Darwinian"? Asking a different kind of question about landscapes
  6. Characterizing hydrologic change through catchment classification
  7. Separating physical and meteorological controls of variable transit times in zero‐order catchments
  8. Analysis of an extreme rainfall-runoff event at the Landscape Evolution Observatory by means of a three-dimensional physically-based hydrologic model
  9. The importance of hydraulic groundwater theory in catchment hydrology: The legacy of Wilfried Brutsaert and Jean-Yves Parlange
  10. Climate-vegetation-soil interactions and long-term hydrologic partitioning: signatures of catchment co-evolution
  11. Technical Note: Characterizing hydrologic change through catchment classification
  12. Darwinian hydrology: can the methodology Charles Darwin pioneered help hydrologic science?
  13. Climate-vegetation-soil interactions and long-term hydrologic partitioning: signatures of catchment co-evolution
  14. Incorporating student-centered approaches into catchment hydrology teaching: a review and synthesis
  15. The master transit time distribution of variable flow systems
  16. Total water storage dynamics in response to climate variability and extremes: Inference from long‐term terrestrial gravity measurement
  17. Engaging the students of today and preparing the catchment hydrologists of tomorrow: student-centered approaches in hydrology education
  18. Corrigendum to “Decreased streamflow in semi-arid basins following drought-induced tree die-off: A counter-intuitive and indirect climate impact on hydrology” [J. Hydrol. 406 (3–4) (2011) 225–233]
  19. Decadal prediction of Colorado River streamflow anomalies using ocean-atmosphere teleconnections
  20. Catchment classification: hydrological analysis of catchment behavior through process-based modeling along a climate gradient
  21. Catchment classification: empirical analysis of hydrologic similarity based on catchment function in the eastern USA
  22. Decreased streamflow in semi-arid basins following drought-induced tree die-off: A counter-intuitive and indirect climate impact on hydrology
  23. Comparative hydrology across AmeriFlux sites: The variable roles of climate, vegetation, and groundwater
  24. The effects of climate and landscape position on chemical denudation and mineral transformation in the Santa Catalina mountain critical zone observatory
  25. Catchment classification: hydrological analysis of catchment behavior through process-based modeling along a climate gradient
  26. Catchment classification: empirical analysis of hydrologic similarity based on catchment function in the eastern USA
  27. Quantifying mountain block recharge by means of catchment‐scale storage‐discharge relationships
  28. Hydrologic effects of the expansion of rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) in a tropical catchment
  29. An open system framework for integrating critical zone structure and function
  30. The future of hydrology: An evolving science for a changing world
  31. Development and application of a catchment similarity index for subsurface flow
  32. Estimation of aquifer lower layer hydraulic conductivity values through base flow hydrograph rising limb analysis
  33. Changes in Streamflow Dynamics in the Rhine Basin under Three High-Resolution Regional Climate Scenarios
  34. The Hydrological Effects of Lateral Preferential Flow Paths in a Glaciated Watershed in the Northeastern USA
  35. Improving Seasonal Predictions of Climate Variability and Water Availability at the Catchment Scale
  36. Hillslope hydrology under glass: confronting fundamental questions of soil-water-biota co-evolution at Biosphere 2
  37. Effects of Climate Variability on Water Storage in the Colorado River Basin
  38. On the role of aspect to quantify water transit times in small mountainous catchments
  39. Hillslope hydrology under glass: confronting fundamental questions of soil-water-biota co-evolution at Biosphere 2
  40. Estimation of permafrost thawing rates in a sub-arctic catchment using recession flow analysis
  41. A tale of two isotopes: differences in hydrograph separation for a runoff event when using δD versus δ18O
  42. The Hills Are Alive: Earth Science in a Controlled Environment
  43. Estimation of permafrost thawing rates in a sub-arctic catchment using recession flow analysis
  44. Dealing with Landscape Heterogeneity in Watershed Hydrology: A Review of Recent Progress toward New Hydrological Theory
  45. Effects of stream‐aquifer disconnection on local flow patterns
  46. Evaluating catchment‐scale hydrological modeling by means of terrestrial gravity observations
  47. A low‐dimensional physically based model of hydrologic control of shallow landsliding on complex hillslopes
  48. Monitoring the timing of snowmelt and the initiation of streamflow using a distributed network of temperature/light sensors
  49. Local hydrologic effects of introducing non‐native vegetation in a tropical catchment
  50. New data sets to estimate terrestrial water storage change
  51. A steady‐state analytical slope stability model for complex hillslopes
  52. Catchment Classification and Hydrologic Similarity
  53. Climate variability effects on spatial soil moisture dynamics
  54. Curvature distribution within hillslopes and catchments and its effect on the hydrological response
  55. Estimating spatial mean root-zone soil moisture from point-scale observations
  56. Estimating spatial mean root-zone soil moisture from point-scale observations
  57. Curvature distribution within hillslopes and catchments and its effect on the hydrological response
  58. The Terrestrial Water Cycle: Modeling and Data Assimilation across Catchment Scales
  59. Modeling the Hydrological Effect on Local Gravity at Moxa, Germany
  60. Mixtures of Gaussians for Uncertainty Description in Bivariate Latent Heat Flux Proxies
  61. Impact of plant water uptake strategy on soil moisture and evapotranspiration dynamics during drydown
  62. Numerical assessment of a dynamical relaxation data assimilation scheme for a catchment hydrological model
  63. Analytical solution of the linearized hillslope‐storage Boussinesq equation for exponential hillslope width functions
  64. The hillslope-storage Boussinesq model for non-constant bedrock slope
  65. Catchment-scale hydrological modeling and data assimilation
  66. Applications of quantitative remote sensing to hydrology
  67. The effect of background hydrometeorological conditions on the sensitivity of evapotranspiration to model parameters: analysis with measurements from an Italian alpine catchment
  68. Analytical solutions to a hillslope-storage kinematic wave equation for subsurface flow
  69. Improvement of TOPLATS‐based discharge predictions through assimilation of ERS‐based remotely sensed soil moisture values
  70. Assimilation of active microwave observation data for soil moisture profile estimation
  71. Correction to “Some analytical solutions of the linearized boussinesq equation with recharge for a sloping aquifer”
  72. Some analytical solutions of the linearized Boussinesq equation with recharge for a sloping aquifer
  73. Multifrequency radar observations of bare surface soil moisture content: A laboratory experiment
  74. Mapping basin scale variable source areas from multitemporal remotely sensed observations of soil moisture behavior
  75. On the applicability of Bartlett–Lewis rectangular pulses models in the modeling of design storms at a point
  76. A dynamic hillslope response model in a geomorphology based rainfall-runoff model
  77. Stream network morphology and storm response in humid catchments
  78. Evaluation of surface soil moisture distribution by means of SAR remote sensing techniques and conceptual hydrological modelling
  79. Hydrologic controls of large floods in a small basin: central Appalachian case study
  80. Correction to “Effective water table depth to describe initial conditions prior to storm rainfall in humid regions” by Peter A. Troch, François P. De Troch, and Wilfried Brutsaert
  81. Estimation of downstream hydraulic geometry exponents with emphasis on channel flow velocity
  82. Evaluation of a distributed catchment scale water balance model
  83. Effective water table depth to describe initial conditions prior to storm rainfall in humid regions
  84. Linear Stochastic Non-Stationary Rainfall-Runoff Modelling and Forecasting
  85. Modelling hydrological mobilization of nutrient pollutants at the catchment scale.