Publications
Filters: Author is Grant, Gordon E. [Clear All Filters]
Effects of forest practices on peakflows and consequent channel response: a state-of-science report for western Oregon and Washington. General Technical Reports. PNW-GTR-760:76. (1.97 MB)
.
2008. .
2017. Summary of the watershed-landscape analysis workshop. PNW GTR 338:68. (4.28 MB)
.
1994. Hydrologic, geomorphic, and aquatic habitat implications of old and new forestry. Symposium on Forests: Wild and Managed: Differences and Consequences. :35-53.
.
1990. An approach to evaluating off-site effects of timber harvest activities on channel morphology. Symposium on the effects of forest land-use on erosion and slope stability. :177-186. (2.66 MB)
.
1984. Morphology and processes of valley floors in mountain stresm, western Cascades, Oregon. Natural and Anthropogenic Influences in Fluvial Geomorphology: the Wolman Volume. 89:83-101. (819.54 KB)
.
1995. Going with the Flow: New Insights into the Hydraulics of High-Energy Fluids. Science Findings, USDA Forest Service, PNW Research Station. (232) (3.33 MB)
.
2020. An assessment technique for evaluating off-site effects of timber harvest activities on stream channels. American Geophysical Union meeting on cumulative effects.
.
1986. A geomorphic basis for the hydrologic behavior of large river systems. River Quality: Dynamics and Restoration. :105-116. (816.25 KB)
.
1997. Sediment problems and consequences during temporary drawdown of a large flood control reservoir for environmental retrofitting. River Basins, Reservoir Sedimentation and Water Resources. 3:7pp. (696.29 KB)
.
2015. Lower Deschutes River Gravel Study Review. Report to Portland General Electric. (2.79 MB)
.
2016. Experimental and field observations of breach dynamics accompanying erosion of Marmot cofferdam, Sandy River, Oregon. World Environmental and Water Resources Congress. (499.74 KB)
.
2008. Long-term patterns of sediment transport following timber harvest, western Cascade Mountains, Oregon.. The Northwest Environmental Journal. 6:413-414.
.
1990. A Framework for Evaulating Disciplinary Contributions to River Restoration. Fourth ECRR International Conference on River Restoration. :10. (250.51 KB)
.
2008. Cummulative effects of forest practices. Forest Perspectives. 1:9-11. (938.83 KB)
.
1991. Interactive comment on “Controls on the hydraulic geometry of alluvial channels: bank stability to gravitational failure, the critical-flow hypothesis, and conservation of mass and energy” by Jon D. Pelletier. Earth Surface Dynamics Discussions. (63.22 KB)
.
2020. Sediment movement at the Oregon LTER site. Sediment movement at LTER sites: mechanics, measurement and integration with hydrology. :4-9.
.
1986. Watershed analysis on the public lands: where are we now and where should we be going? Proceedings of the Fourth Watershed Management Council Workshop. Water Resources Center Report No. 86:49-53.
.
1995. The Remains of the Dam: What have we learned from 15 years of US dam removals. River Basins, Reservoir Sedimentation and Water Resources. 3:8pp. (702.79 KB)
.
2015. Excursions in fluvial (dis)continuity. Geomorphology. 217:145-153. (686.76 KB)
.
2017. .
1999. Morphology of high gradient streams at different spatial scales, Western Cascades, Oregon. Shizuoka Workshop on Channel Geomorphological Change and the Control of Sedimentary Load in Devastated Streams. :1-12.
.
1989. Dam Removal: Panacea or Pandora for rivers? Hydrological Processes. 15:1531-1532. (905.22 KB)
.
2001. A River Runs Through It: Conceptual Models in Fluvial Geomorphology. Treatise on Geomorphology. 9:6-21. (1000.79 KB)
.
2013. The frontier beneath our feet. Water Resources Research. (598.57 KB)
.
2017.