ForestHydrologyUnimelb

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ForestHydrologyUnimelb

ForestHydrologyUnimelb

@ForestHydroMelb

Ecohydrology, Geomorphology and bushfire research

Melbourne, Victoria Katılım Ekim 2020
114 Takip Edilen77 Takipçiler
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Sarah McColl-Gausden
Sarah McColl-Gausden@sarahmccg·
Amazing keynote by @elsa_pastor on women in wildfire research. Gender balance is slowly improving but at ~32% there is still a long way to go (as the “manel” at the opening of #icffr exemplified). Perhaps there is the need for an open, safe space to discuss practical next steps.
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Dr Tom Fairman
Dr Tom Fairman@itsnotfairman·
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Dr Tom Fairman
Dr Tom Fairman@itsnotfairman·
I've spent a lot of time in disturbed forests (severe fire, multiple severe fires, timber harvest, prescribed fire, and combinations of all) but the windthrow in the Wombat State Forest last year really is something else.
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Ben Domensino
Ben Domensino@Ben_Domensino·
Sydney's 148.6mm during the last four days brings the city's running annual total up to 1696mm, continuing its wettest year-to-date in records dating back to 1859. This year's cumulative rainfall up to July 4 is 127mm higher than the previous record of 1569mm from 1890.
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Parks M
Parks M@parksoftheworld·
Dear student conducting field work: Take (lots) of pictures of your work, especially field sites, your future self will thank you.
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Francis Rengers
Francis Rengers@pyrogeomorph·
Have you ever searched for a simple model for debris flow runout/deposition and come up short? The wait is over now. Alex Gorr led this study to develop a really slick model of debris flow runout: link.springer.com/article/10.100…
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ForestHydrologyUnimelb
ForestHydrologyUnimelb@ForestHydroMelb·
We are happy to share our recent paper by Jabbar Khaledi, “Wildfire contribution to streamflow variability across Australian temperate zone”, published in The Journal of Hydrology. Co-authors Patrick Lane, @TACAGEM and Petter Nyman (1/4) sciencedirect.com/science/articl…
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