Thanks, dad. Yes, air will become more humid as it travels along the length of a lake's surface. I believe this effect is included in some more sophisticated lake evaporation models but we kept it simple in ours
Thanks, dad. Yes, air will become more humid as it travels along the length of a lake's surface. I believe this effect is included in some more sophisticated lake evaporation models but we kept it simple in ours
Cross correlation results for lagging outflow discharge estimates at 779 lakes. (a) Map showing each lakeβs lag time in days at the highest Spearman correlation (Ο). (b) The percentage of natural lakes and reservoirs based on the lag time with the highest Ο.
Our new paper uses #SWOT_satellite data to differentiate between natural & managed lake dynamics across North America. We find that inflows & outflows of managed lakes are significantly more variable than natural lakes, revealing signatures of reservoir operations: doi.org/10.1088/1748...
New paper by Katie McQuillan leverages satellite radar to map lake evaporation at 25Γ finer resolution than operational surface analysis products, opening up applications from improved gauge placement to evaluating geoengineering strategies doi.org/10.1109/LGRS...
Thanks, Dad
New paper is featured on the cover of GSA Today π₯³
We show that the #SWOT satellites's radar observations are a valuable new source of data for studying river processes/ fluvial geomorphology.
Led by Molly Stroud @mollystroud.bsky.social @vt-science.bsky.social
Paper: doi.org/10.1130/GSAT...
Time to get your public comments in on the proposed Waters of the U.S. rule that would strip protections for countless wetlands and streams.
Trout unlimited has a tool on their page that will automatically send your message to the EPA as well as your representatives:
www.tu.org/conservation...
Grad students in my group participate in the 2025 Flip the Fair science fair and research expo in Salem Virginia
Global Rivers Group members: Emily Ellis, Steve Yoon, Yohtaro Kobayashi, David Go, Hana Thurman, and George Allen show off their mussels at the Claytor Lake Mussel Salvage event
Yohtaro Kobayashi and Hana Thurman search for native mussels as David Go and Emily Ellis clean up trash in the background
This weekend my research group volunteered at the Claytor Lake Mussel Salvage event near Blacksburg, VA. We surveyed and relocated hundreds of native mussels during the scheduled biennial lake drawdown. #UtProsim
@vtgeosciences.bsky.social @vt-science.bsky.social
Join the Global Flood Partnership (GFP) 2025 Fall Webinar Series!
On November 19, 2025 (16:00 CET), we bring you three expert talks on how Earth-Observation data is transforming flood mapping, risk assessment, and resilience strategies.
Register here: lnkd.in/gjYX3GV8
See also: lnkd.in/gRQFuk_J
Another SWOT Science Team Meeting for the books!
27 things we wish weβd known when we started our PhDs
Natureβs survey of PhD candidates reveals hard-won wisdom on choosing supervisors, managing mental health and surviving academic culture.
Weβre on Capitol Hill with 225 Earth & space scientists β including @aas.org and @planetarysociety.bsky.social β urging Congress to reopen the government and protect NASA science. ππ
Join us: buff.ly/a3YuGgY
#ScienceIsEssential #AGU
First NISAR L-band images released! They look great! www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/nasa-is...
Looking for a postdoc, and interested in river-coastal linkages, #remote sensing, and time series analysis? Come work with us @natureatcal.bsky.social on an exciting project led by @rachelspatial.bsky.social! CC @sfs-src.bsky.social @aslo.org @cerfscience.bsky.social βͺβͺ@caseagrant.bsky.socialβ¬
Volcanic island somewhere?
Ad for 2 graduate student positions and and 1 lab and field assistant position at UCSB. More info go to audreythellman.weebly.com
Hello freshwater friends! Iβm starting a lab(!!) and recruiting 2 students to start Fall 2026 and a lab/field assistant to start this Fall 2025! Research topic is broad: rivers πΆ, ice/snow βοΈ, nutrients π, algae π±see below for more info
Please pass this along to any interested folks :)
Correct! SWOT has a 21-day repeat orbit but most places are observed more frequently because of swath overlap
Absolutely - we are developing a method to automatically identify and track these flood waves with SWOT. Stay tuned! In the meantime, here's the first paper on the topic if you're interested: agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
"Seen" meaning retrieved water surface elevation data over rivers while a flood wave is propagating down a river. Here are three examples of flood waves/flow waves traveling down rivers, including one in the Colorado River, TX - near the Guadalupe River:
Flood waves like those that devastated Texas last week can be seen by the NASA #SWOT satellite. Another reason to support #NASA Earth Science
AGU H3S invites you to submit an abstract to our session at #AGU25 Thinking Outside the Box Plot:
Communicating Science Beyond the Paper! The session explores creative ways to communicate research. Conveners: @adischner.bsky.social
@acarneiromar.bsky.social
@gescilam.bsky.social
Cee Nell
Emily Ellis
AGU H3S invites you to contribute to our session at #AGU25 Hydrology Student, Postdoc, and
Early Career Flash Talks! This session highlights
research performed by fellow Early Career Researchers within the field of Hydrology. Conveners: Matthew Preisser and Kathryn Moore
Hang in there and give yourself a break!
Donut chart shows the relative contributions of each stream order to basin total river and stream surface area (RSSA)
This has implications for how we calculate river and stream surface area (RSSA) at the global scale
Stacked histograms of river widths colored by stream order in the Mississippi basin
Scaling these widths across the Mississippi basin, we find an emergent fractal distribution of river widths (black line)
River widths of each stream order exhibit predictable log-normal distributions.
π¨New paperπ¨ shows a remarkably clean relationship between river width and stream order across the US
πβπ ππππ‘βπ ππ π
ππ£πππ πππ ππ‘πππππ π΄ππππ π ππππ‘πππ ππππππ ... π doi.org/10.1029/2025...
#hydrology #geomorphology #rivers #RemoteSensing
River widths of each stream order exhibit predictable log-normal distributions. Outer plots show distribution of river width measurements by stream order with fitted log-normal functions. Location parameter (ΞΌ) and scale parameter (Ο) of log-normal fits are shown on each plot. Inner scatterplots show linear relationship between stream order (Ο) and log-normal location parameter (upper scatterplot) and scale parameter (lower scatterplot).
Using multi-scale remote sensing and fieldwork, we found that river widths of each stream order exhibit a very predictable log-normal distribution:
The Washington Post also covered our paper! Here's the article with a soft paywall: wapo.st/43UuquB
Hana (grad student in my group) will be doing a research internship at JPL this summer. Here she is on her first day on the job. Good luck, Hana!! πππ