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You are viewing titles for THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY in the Hydrologic sciences available through the UMI Dissertations & Thesis Gradwoorks site
 
Evaluating the effects of forest liming in Appalachian watersheds: Chemistry and multi-isotope approaches
Interpreting pore pressure in marine mudstones with pore pressure penetrometers, in situ data, and laboratory measurements
 
Numerical study of fracture aperture characteristics and their impact on single-phase flow and capillary-dominated displacement
Weathering advance rates in basalt: Prediction and comparison across scales
 
Evaluating model behavior for hydrologic forecasting in gauged and ungauged watersheds
Geodetic and seismic observations of ice-stream dynamics
 
Investigations of fluid flow and heat transport related to the strength of the San Andreas Fault
Integrated modeling of multi-scale hydrodynamics, sediment and pollutant transport
 
Quantification of soil macropore network and its relationship to preferential flow using combined x-ray computed tomography and breakthrough curve analysis
Tracing stream nitrate in a central Pennsylvania mixed land-use basin using stable isotopes, bacteria, and inorganic chemicals
 
Millennial slip-rates along the eastern Kunlun fault and rapid evolution of channel morphology in the yellow river headwaters, northeastern Tibet, China
Toward a Hydrologic Modeling System
 
Annual variations in ground-water temperature as a tracer of river-aquifer interactions
The hydroarchaeological approach: Understanding the ancient Maya impact on the Palenque watershed
 
Many-objective groundwater monitoring network design using bias-aware ensemble Kalman filtering, evolutionary optimization, and visual analytics
Characterizing hydrologic settings and hydrologic regimes of headwater riparian wetlands in the ridge and valley of Pennsylvania
 
Integrated hydrologic modeling in an ungauged ephemeral watershed: Rio Salado, New Mexico
Hydropedological processes and their implications for precision agriculture