Fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond
Professor Kenneth J. Gregory was a major contributor to fluvial palaeohydrological research. Beginning in the early 1980s, under his influence, rapid international growth of the discipline was accompanied by major advances in research methods and techniques. Current research emphases include applica...
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ftunivwollongong:oai:ro.uow.edu.au:test2021-4735 2023-05-15T16:11:57+02:00 Fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond Baker, Victor R. Benito, Gerardo Brown, Antony G. Carling, Paul A. Enzel, Yehouda Greenbaum, Noam Herget, Jürgen Kale, Vishwas S. Latrubesse, Edgardo M. Macklin, Mark G. Nanson, Gerald C. Oguchi, Takashi Thorndycraft, Varyl R. Ben Dor, Yoav Zituni, Rami 2021-01-01T08:00:00Z https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/3726 https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5275 unknown Research Online https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/3726 https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5275 Test Series for Scopus Harvesting 2021 climatic change fluvial palaeohydrology megaflooding meta-analysis river engineering rivers text 2021 ftunivwollongong https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5275 2022-01-17T23:25:20Z Professor Kenneth J. Gregory was a major contributor to fluvial palaeohydrological research. Beginning in the early 1980s, under his influence, rapid international growth of the discipline was accompanied by major advances in research methods and techniques. Current research emphases include applications of quantitative modelling and meta-analysis; the correlation of fluvial events to other records, notably palaeolacustine records; and methods for application to diverse issues of river engineering and management. The international expansion and detailed analyses of fluvial palaeohydrology are exemplified by recent studies done in Fennoscandia, the Mediterranean region, India, Israel, Australia, Pacific humid island arcs, and South America. Future developments will involve expanded work with other academic disciplines, such as archaeology, as well as applications to practical problems arising from future climatic change and related environmental hazards, particularly extremes. Remote sensing and high-resolution topography data and tools (e.g. LiDAR) will facilitate new discoveries of ancient exceptional flooding phenomena (megaflooding and superfloods) on Earth and on the palaeofluvial forms of Earth-like planets. New opportunities will also arise from the increased use of machine learning and artificial intelligence for analyses of ‘big data’. Text Fennoscandia University of Wollongong, Australia: Research Online Pacific Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 47 1 58 81 |
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Open Polar |
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University of Wollongong, Australia: Research Online |
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ftunivwollongong |
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topic |
climatic change fluvial palaeohydrology megaflooding meta-analysis river engineering rivers |
spellingShingle |
climatic change fluvial palaeohydrology megaflooding meta-analysis river engineering rivers Baker, Victor R. Benito, Gerardo Brown, Antony G. Carling, Paul A. Enzel, Yehouda Greenbaum, Noam Herget, Jürgen Kale, Vishwas S. Latrubesse, Edgardo M. Macklin, Mark G. Nanson, Gerald C. Oguchi, Takashi Thorndycraft, Varyl R. Ben Dor, Yoav Zituni, Rami Fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond |
topic_facet |
climatic change fluvial palaeohydrology megaflooding meta-analysis river engineering rivers |
description |
Professor Kenneth J. Gregory was a major contributor to fluvial palaeohydrological research. Beginning in the early 1980s, under his influence, rapid international growth of the discipline was accompanied by major advances in research methods and techniques. Current research emphases include applications of quantitative modelling and meta-analysis; the correlation of fluvial events to other records, notably palaeolacustine records; and methods for application to diverse issues of river engineering and management. The international expansion and detailed analyses of fluvial palaeohydrology are exemplified by recent studies done in Fennoscandia, the Mediterranean region, India, Israel, Australia, Pacific humid island arcs, and South America. Future developments will involve expanded work with other academic disciplines, such as archaeology, as well as applications to practical problems arising from future climatic change and related environmental hazards, particularly extremes. Remote sensing and high-resolution topography data and tools (e.g. LiDAR) will facilitate new discoveries of ancient exceptional flooding phenomena (megaflooding and superfloods) on Earth and on the palaeofluvial forms of Earth-like planets. New opportunities will also arise from the increased use of machine learning and artificial intelligence for analyses of ‘big data’. |
format |
Text |
author |
Baker, Victor R. Benito, Gerardo Brown, Antony G. Carling, Paul A. Enzel, Yehouda Greenbaum, Noam Herget, Jürgen Kale, Vishwas S. Latrubesse, Edgardo M. Macklin, Mark G. Nanson, Gerald C. Oguchi, Takashi Thorndycraft, Varyl R. Ben Dor, Yoav Zituni, Rami |
author_facet |
Baker, Victor R. Benito, Gerardo Brown, Antony G. Carling, Paul A. Enzel, Yehouda Greenbaum, Noam Herget, Jürgen Kale, Vishwas S. Latrubesse, Edgardo M. Macklin, Mark G. Nanson, Gerald C. Oguchi, Takashi Thorndycraft, Varyl R. Ben Dor, Yoav Zituni, Rami |
author_sort |
Baker, Victor R. |
title |
Fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond |
title_short |
Fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond |
title_full |
Fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond |
title_fullStr |
Fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond |
title_full_unstemmed |
Fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond |
title_sort |
fluvial palaeohydrology in the 21st century and beyond |
publisher |
Research Online |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/3726 https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5275 |
geographic |
Pacific |
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Pacific |
genre |
Fennoscandia |
genre_facet |
Fennoscandia |
op_source |
Test Series for Scopus Harvesting 2021 |
op_relation |
https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/3726 https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5275 |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5275 |
container_title |
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms |
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47 |
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1 |
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58 |
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81 |
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