Publications
Filters: Author is Gordon E. Grant [Clear All Filters]
Debris dams and the relief of headwater streams. Geomorphology. 82:84-97. (959.5 KB)
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2006. Debris flow initiation in proglacial gullies on Mount Rainier, Washington. Geomorphology. 226:249-260. (3.15 MB)
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2014. Deep groundwater mediates streamflow response to climate warming in the Oregon Cascades. Climatic Change. 86:189-210. (756.38 KB)
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2008. Discussion: “Meadow Restoration Increases Baseflow and Groundwater Storage in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.” By Luke J.H. Hunt, Julie Fair and Maxwell Odland.. Journal of the American Water Resources Association. :1-4. (103 KB)
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2019. Disentangling Effects of Forest Harvest on Long-term Hydrologic and Sediment Dynamics, Western Cascades, Oregon. Journal of Hydrology. 580 (12.5 MB)
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2019. Does Lava Flow Like Water? Assessing Applications of Critical Flow Theory to Channelized Lava Flows JGR: Earth Surface. (4.5 MB)
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2022. Downs with Dams: Unchaining US Rivers. Geotimes.
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2008. Downstream effects of timber harvesting on channel morphology in Elk River basin, Oregon.. Journal of Environmental Quality. 20:60-72.
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1991. Dynamics and geomorphology of mountain rivers [Book Review]. Journal of the North American Benthological Society. 16:719-720.
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1997. Dynamics of Wood transport in Streams: A Flume Experiment. Earth Surface Processes and LandformsEarth Surface Processes and Landforms. 22:669-683. (1016.41 KB)
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1997. Effects of climate change on hydrology and water resources in the Blue Mountains, Oregon, USA. Climate Services. (5.61 MB)
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2018. Effects of forest land use on watershed hydrology: a modeling approach.. The Northwest Environmental Journal. 6:414-415.
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1990. Effects of wood on debris flow runout in small mountain watersheds. Water Resources Research. 39:1168. (878.16 KB)
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2003. .
2023. Excursions in fluvial (dis)continuity. Geomorphology. 217:145-153. (686.76 KB)
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2017. Experiments on transport and deposition of woody debris in channels. Journal of the Japanese Sabo Society. 6:205-206.
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1993. The frontier beneath our feet. Water Resources Research. (598.57 KB)
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2017. A geohydrologic framework for characterizing summer streamflow sensitivity to climate warming in the Pacific Northwest, USA. Hydrology and Earth Systems Sciences. 18:1-18. (654.33 KB)
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2014. A geological framework for interpreting the low-flow regimes of Cascade streams, Willamette River Basin, Oregon. Water Resources Research. 40 (331.13 KB)
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2004. Great Expectations: Deconstructing the Process Pathways Underlying Beaver-Related Restoration. Bioscience. biaa165 (876.11 KB)
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2021. Groundwater dynamics mediate low-flow response to global warming in snow-dominated alpine regions. Water Resources Research. 45 (982.65 KB)
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2009. Hillslope Hydrology in Global Change Research and Earth System Modeling. Water Resources Research. 55:35. (7.38 MB)
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2019. Hydrogeologic controls on summer stream temperatures in the McKenzie River basin, Oregon. Hydrological Processes. 21:3288-3300. (670.99 KB)
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2007. The Importance of Coarse Organic Matter and Depositional Environment to Carbon Burial Behind Dams in Mountainous Environments. Journal of Geophysical Research:Earth Surface. 124:2118-2140. (3.29 MB)
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2019. Influence of hyporheic flow and geomorphology on temperature of a large, gravel-bed river, Clackamas River, Oregon, USA. Hydrological Processes. 22:941-953. (1.18 MB)
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2008.