All Stories

  1. Connectivity as an emergent property of geomorphic systems
  2. Editorial 2018
  3. Biotic drivers of river and floodplain geomorphology - New molecular methods for assessing present-day and past biota
  4. Natural flood management
  5. Editorial 2017: respond, don't rebut
  6. Archival photogrammetric analysis of river-floodplain systems using Structure from Motion (SfM) methods
  7. Slow science, the geographical expedition, and Critical Physical Geography
  8. Valorising our research in all its forms
  9. Emergent geomorphic-vegetation interactions on a subalpine alluvial fan
  10. Application of archival aerial photogrammetry to quantify climate forcing of alpine landscapes
  11. Organic matter processing and soil evolution in a braided river system
  12. Editorial 2015
  13. High-resolution numerical modelling of flow—vegetation interactions
  14. Investigating the geomorphological potential of freely available and accessible structure-from-motion photogrammetry using a smartphone
  15. The hydraulic description of vegetated river channels: the weaknesses of existing formulations and emerging alternatives
  16. The role of soil in vegetated gravelly river braid plains: more than just a passive response?
  17. The role of tributary relative timing and sequencing in controlling large floods
  18. Acting, predicting and intervening in a socio-hydrological world
  19. Scales and causes of heterogeneity in bars in a large multi-channel river: Río Paraná, Argentina
  20. Quadrant/octant sequencing and the role of coherent structures in bed load sediment entrainment
  21. Solution Scanning as a Key Policy Tool: Identifying Management Interventions to Help Maintain and Enhance Regulating Ecosystem Services
  22. ESPL, Open Access and Open Review - time for some reflection
  23. Good practice in authoring manuscripts on geomorphology
  24. Communicating geomorphology: global challenges for the twenty-first century
  25. Learning through Computer Model Improvisations
  26. Deposits of the sandy braided South Saskatchewan River: Implications for the use of modern analogs in reconstructing channel dimensions in reservoir characterization
  27. Explaining Rapid Transitions in the Practice of Flood Risk Management
  28. Editorial 2013
  29. Overflowing with Issues: Following the Political Trajectories of Flooding
  30. Application of a roughness-length representation to parameterize energy loss in 3-D numerical simulations of large rivers
  31. 21st century climate change: where has all the geomorphology gone?
  32. Quantification of the relation between surface morphodynamics and subsurface sedimentological product in sandy braided rivers
  33. Modelling hydrodynamics in the Rio Paraná, Argentina: An evaluation and inter-comparison of reduced-complexity and physics based models applied to a large sand-bed river
  34. A Monte Carlo approach to the inverse problem of diffuse pollution risk in agricultural catchments
  35. Geography as a shared project: Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Medals and Awards ceremony 2012
  36. Splitting rivers at their seams: bifurcations and avulsion
  37. Ethical Risk Management, but Without Risk Communication◊
  38. Conclusion: Reflections on ‘Critical’ Risk Research
  39. Introduction: Risk Research after Fukushima
  40. Impacts of upland open drains upon runoff generation: a numerical assessment of catchment-scale impacts
  41. Testing the influence of topography and material properties on catchment-scale soil moisture patterns using remotely sensed vegetation patterns in a humid temperate catchment, northern Britain
  42. Limits on the validity of infinite length assumptions for modelling shallow landslides
  43. Critical Risk Research
  44. Topographic forcing of flow partition and flow structures at river bifurcations
  45. RESERVOIR COMPENSATION RELEASES: IMPACT ON THE MACROINVERTEBRATE COMMUNITY OF THE DERWENT RIVER, NORTHUMBERLAND, UK—A LONGITUDINAL STUDY
  46. Editorial 2012
  47. Seeking good peer review in geomorphology
  48. The link between land-use management and fluvial flood risk
  49. Flow structures at an idealized bifurcation: a numerical experiment
  50. An experimental study of discharge partitioning and flow structure at symmetrical bifurcations
  51. The relationship between Lamb weather types and long-term changes in flood frequency, River Eden, UK
  52. Coproducing Flood Risk Knowledge: Redistributing Expertise in Critical ‘Participatory Modelling’
  53. Evolution and sedimentology of a channel fill in the sandy braided South Saskatchewan River and its comparison to the deposits of an adjacent compound bar
  54. Water table dynamics in undisturbed, drained and restored blanket peat
  55. Imagining flood futures: risk assessment and management in practice
  56. Risk-based modelling of diffuse land use impacts from rural landscapes upon salmonid fry abundance
  57. A coupled sediment routing and lateral migration model for gravel-bed rivers
  58. The tragedy of the reviewing commons?
  59. Doing flood risk science differently: an experiment in radical scientific method
  60. A method for parameterising roughness and topographic sub-grid scale effects in hydraulic modelling from LiDAR data
  61. Interactions between subgrid-scale resolution, feature representation and grid-scale resolution in flood inundation modelling
  62. Coherent flow structures in a depth-limited flow over a gravel surface: The influence of surface roughness
  63. Can we distinguish flood frequency and magnitude in the sedimentological record of rivers?
  64. Using sediment impact sensors to improve the morphological sediment budget approach for estimating bedload transport rates
  65. Quantification of braided river channel change using archival digital image analysis
  66. Knowledge-theoretic models in hydrology
  67. Communities of knowledge: Science and flood management in Bangladesh
  68. Reconstruction of subgrid-scale topographic variability and its effect upon the spatial structure of three-dimensional river flow
  69. Understanding sediment transfer and morphological change for managing upland gravel-bed rivers
  70. Editorial 2010
  71. On the relationship between flow and suspended sediment transport over the crest of a sand dune, Río Paraná, Argentina
  72. Monitoring Suspended Sediment Dynamics Using MBES
  73. Suspended sediment transport and deposition over a dune: Río Paraná, Argentina
  74. Representation of landscape hydrological connectivity using a topographically driven surface flow index
  75. The spatial and temporal patterns of aggradation in a temperate, upland, gravel-bed river
  76. Increased temperature sensitivity of net DOC production from ombrotrophic peat due to water table draw-down
  77. Coherent flow structures in a depth-limited flow over a gravel surface: The role of near-bed turbulence and influence of Reynolds number
  78. Editorial: one year on . . .
  79. The potential of digital filtering of generic topographic data for geomorphological research
  80. What makes a fish (hydrologically) happy? A case for inverse modelling
  81. Link between DOC in near surface peat and stream water in an upland catchment
  82. Modelling Hydraulics and Sediment Transport at River Confluences
  83. Large River Channel Confluences
  84. Causes of rapid mixing at a junction of two large rivers: Río Paraná and Río Paraguay, Argentina
  85. Overland flow velocity and roughness properties in peatlands
  86. Reconceptualising coarse sediment delivery problems in rivers as catchment-scale and diffuse
  87. Export of dissolved organic carbon from an upland peatland during storm events: Implications for flux estimates
  88. Does hydrological connectivity improve modelling of coarse sediment delivery in upland environments?
  89. Emergence of coherent flow structures over a gravel surface: A numerical experiment
  90. Assessment of rainfall-runoff models based upon wavelet analysis
  91. Long periods of boredom interspersed by brief moments of terror?
  92. Investigating the Effects of DEM Error in Scaling Analysis
  93. The timing and magnitude of coarse sediment transport events within an upland, temperate gravel-bed river
  94. 21 Contemporary morphological change in braided gravel-bed rivers: new developments from field and laboratory studies, with particular reference to the influence of riparian vegetation
  95. Interactions between sediment delivery, channel change, climate change and flood risk in a temperate upland environment
  96. A comparison of one- and two-dimensional approaches to modelling flood inundation over complex upland floodplains
  97. Automated correction of surface obstruction errors in digital surface models using off-the-shelf image processing
  98. Surveillant Science: Challenges for the Management of Rural Environments Emerging from the New Generation Diffuse Pollution Models
  99. Feature based image processing methods applied to bathymetric measurements from airborne remote sensing in fluvial environments
  100. Form roughness and the absence of secondary flow in a large confluence–diffluence, Rio Paraná, Argentina
  101. Chapter 22 Impacts of artificial drainage of peatlands on runoff production and water quality
  102. Urban fluvial flood modelling using a two-dimensional diffusion-wave treatment, part 2: development of a sub-grid-scale treatment
  103. Urban fluvial flood modelling using a two-dimensional diffusion-wave treatment, part 1: mesh resolution effects
  104. Morphology and flow fields of three-dimensional dunes, Rio Paraná, Argentina: Results from simultaneous multibeam echo sounding and acoustic Doppler current profiling
  105. Automated grain size measurements from airborne remote sensing for long profile measurements of fluvial grain sizes
  106. Roughness Parameterization in CFD Modelling of Gravel-Bed Rivers
  107. Parameterisation, Validation and Uncertainty Analysis of CFD Models of Fluvial and Flood Hydraulics in the Natural Environment
  108. Numerical Modelling of Floodplain Flow
  109. Modelling Wetting and Drying Processes in Hydraulic Models
  110. Modelling Water Quality Processes in Estuaries
  111. Modelling Solute Transport Processes in Free Surface Flow CFD Schemes
  112. Modelling of Sand Deposition in Archaeologically Significant Reaches of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon, USA
  113. Modelling of Open Channel Flow through Vegetation
  114. Introduction to Statistical Turbulence Modelling for Hydraulic Engineering Flows
  115. Introduction to Numerical Methods for Fluid Flow
  116. Ecohydraulics: A New Interdisciplinary Frontier for CFD
  117. Computational Fluid Dynamics Modelling for Environmental Hydraulics
  118. CFD for Environmental Design and Management
  119. Basic Equations for Sediment Transport in CFD for Fluvial Morphodynamics
  120. A Framework for Model Verification and Validation of CFD Schemes in Natural Open Channel Flows
  121. Remotely Sensed Topographic Data for River Channel Research: The Identification, Explanation and Management of Error
  122. Being critical: a reply to Maslin and des Clers
  123. The theoretical foundations and potential for large-eddy simulation (LES) in fluvial geomorphic and sedimentological research
  124. Influence of drought-induced acidification on the mobility of dissolved organic carbon in peat soils
  125. Towards Risk‐Based Prediction in Real‐World Applications of Complex Hydraulic Models
  126. Computational Fluid Dynamics
  127. Deadening environmental space
  128. Roughness - time for a re-evaluation?
  129. Texture-based image segmentation applied to the quanti?cation of superficial sand in salmonid river gravels
  130. Editorial: Earth Surface Exchanges(ESEX)
  131. Rivers of dreams: on the gulf between theoretical and practical aspects of an upland river restoration
  132. Catchment-scale mapping of surface grain size in gravel bed rivers using airborne digital imagery
  133. Numerical modeling of flow processes over gravelly surfaces using structured grids and a numerical porosity treatment
  134. A network-index-based version of TOPMODEL for use with high-resolution digital topographic data
  135. Photogrammetric and laser altimetric reconstruction of water levels for extreme flood event analysis
  136. Flow in meander bends with recirculation at the inner bank
  137. Estimation of erosion and deposition volumes in a large, gravel-bed, braided river using synoptic remote sensing
  138. Editorial: the generation of high quality topographic data for hydrology and geomorphology: new data sources, new applications and new problems
  139. Cost-effective non-metric close-range digital photogrammetry and its application to a study of coarse gravel river beds
  140. Suspended sediment yield and metal contamination in a river catchment affected by El Niño events and gold mining activities: the Puyango river basin, southern Ecuador
  141. Remote survey of large-scale braided, gravel-bed rivers using digital photogrammetry and image analysis
  142. Assessing the credibility of a series of computational fluid dynamic simulations of open channel flow
  143. Nutrient and grazing factors in relation to phytoplankton level in a eutrophic shallow lake: the effect of low macrophyte abundance
  144. Biological and chemical factors influencing shallow lake eutrophication: a long-term study
  145. Through‐Water Close Range Digital Photogrammetry in Flume and Field Environments
  146. Porous Rivers: a New Way of Conceptualising and Modelling River and Floodplain Flows?
  147. High-resolution numerical modelling of three-dimensional flows over complex river bed topography
  148. Automated extraction of grain-size data from gravel surfaces using digital image processing
  149. Environmental impacts and metal exposure of aquatic ecosystems in rivers contaminated by small scale gold mining: the Puyango River basin, southern Ecuador
  150. Monitoring River Channel and Flume Surfaces with Digital Photogrammetry
  151. Constructive comments on D Massey 'Space-time, "science" and the relationship between physical geography and human geography:rsquo;
  152. Continuity and change in environmental systems: the case of shallow lake ecosystems
  153. Role of Bed Discordance at Asymmetrical River Confluences
  154. Measuring Flume Surfaces for Hydraulics Research Using a Kodak DCS460
  155. High resolution flow modelling in hydrology and geomorphology edited by P.D. Bates and S.N. Lane. John Wiley, Chichester, 2000. No. of pages: 374. Price: £45·00. ISBN 0 471 97875 2.
  156. Evaluating interactions between soil drainage and seedling performance in a restoration of Pinus sylvestris woodland, Scotland
  157. Environmental Impact of Small-scale and Artisanal Gold Mining in Southern Ecuador
  158. The Measurement of River Channel Morphology Using Digital Photogrammetry
  159. The Hydraulics of Open Channel Flow. An Introduction BY HUBERT CHANSONxiv + 495 pp., 24.4 × 17.2 × 3.0 cm, ISBN 0 340 74067 1 paperback, £29.99, London, UK: Arnold, 1999
  160. Numerical simulation of three-dimensional, time-averaged flow structure at river channel confluences
  161. Secondary circulation cells in river channel confluences: measurement artefacts or coherent flow structures?
  162. Application of Digital Photogrammetry to Complex Topography for Geomorphological Research
  163. The development of an automated correction �procedure for digital photogrammetry for the study of wide, shallow, gravel-bed rivers
  164. The development of an automated correction ­procedure for digital photogrammetry for the study of wide, shallow, gravel‐bed rivers
  165. Environmental Impact of Small-scale and Artisanal Gold Mining in Southern Ecuador
  166. The application of computational fluid dynamics to natural river channels: three-dimensional versus two-dimensional approaches
  167. Landform monitoring, modelling and analysis edited by S. Lane, K. Richards and J. Chandler. John Wiley, Chichester 1998. No. of pages: 454. Price: £ 65.00. ISBN 0 471 969 77 X.
  168. Time-averaged flow structure in the central region of a stream confluence: a discussion
  169. Three-dimensional measurement of river channel flow processes using acoustic doppler velocimetry
  170. Three-dimensional measurement of river channel flow processes using acoustic doppler velocimetry
  171. Assessment of Dem Quality for Characterizing Surface Roughness Using Close Range Digital Photogrammetry
  172. High resolution flow modelling in hydrology and geomorphology
  173. Hydraulic modelling in hydrology and geomorphology: a review of high resolution approaches
  174. Hydraulic modelling in hydrology and geomorphology: a review of high resolution approaches
  175. High resolution, two‐dimensional spatial modelling of flow processes in a multi‐thread channel
  176. High resolution, two-dimensional spatial modelling of flow processes in a multi-thread channel
  177. Investigation of controls on secondary circulation in a simple confluence geometry using a three-dimensional numerical model
  178. Sensitivity of bed shear stress estimated from vertical velocity profiles: the problem of sampling resolution
  179. Book Review: Numerical Methods for Shallow Water Flow by C. B. Vreugdenhill, Water Science and Technology Library, Volume 13, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, 1994. No. of pages: 261. Price: £78.00. ISBN 0-7923-3164-8
  180. Book Review: Numerical Methods for Shallow Water Flow by C. B. Vreugdenhill, Water Science and Technology Library, Volume 13, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, 1994. No. of pages: 261. Price: £78.00. ISBN 0-7923-3164-8
  181. Climate change and energy policy
  182. The reconstruction of bed material yield and supply histories in gravel-bed streams
  183. Linking River Channel Form and Process: Time, Space and Causality Revisited
  184. WATER QUALITY AND ITS CONTROL edited by M. Hino, A. A. Balkema, Rotterdam, 1994, No. of pages: ix + 262. Price: £72.00 (hb). ISBN 90-5410-123-7.
  185. Environmental Science for Environmental Management
  186. Discharge and sediment supply controls on erosion and deposition in a dynamic alluvial channel
  187. Braided rivers edited by J. L. Best and C. S. Bristow, Geological Society Special Publication No. 75, The Geological Society, London, 1993. No. of pages: 419. Price: £75.00. ISBN 0-903317-88-5
  188. Laboratory and field assessment of an infrared turbidity probe and its response to particle size and variation in suspended sediment concentration
  189. Morphological Estimation of the Time-Integrated Bed Load Transport Rate
  190. Scales of Variation of Suspended Sediment Concentration and Turbidity in a Glacial Meltwater Stream
  191. Application of Distributed Sensitivity Analysis to a Model of Turbulent Open Channel Flow in a Natural River Channel
  192. Developments in monitoring and modelling small-scale river bed topography
  193. Developments in photogrammetry; the geomorphological potential
  194. High Resolution Remote Sensing for Understanding Instream Habitat
  195. Approaching the System-Scale Understanding of Braided River Behaviour
  196. Making Mathematical Models Perform in Geographical Space(s)
  197. The Significance of Models in Geomorphology: From Concepts to Experiments