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Chris Soulsby

Researcher at University of Aberdeen

Publications -  397
Citations -  17896

Chris Soulsby is an academic researcher from University of Aberdeen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Groundwater & Surface runoff. The author has an hindex of 75, co-authored 370 publications receiving 15497 citations. Previous affiliations of Chris Soulsby include Technical University of Berlin & National Rivers Authority.

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Regionalization of transit time estimates in montane catchments by integrating landscape controls

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used longer-term (up to 17 years) weekly input-output relationships of Cl− to estimate Mean Transit Time (MTT) using a range of TTD models in 20 headwater catchments (ranging from <1 to 35 km2) in seven geomorphologically and climatically distinct parts of the Scottish Highlands.
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Heat exchanges and temperatures within a salmon spawning stream in the Cairngorms, Scotland: seasonal and sub-seasonal dynamics

TL;DR: In this article, a hydrometeorological study of a Cairngorm stream (Girnock burn, northeast Scotland) over the salmon spawning-hatch season (late October 2001 to mid-April 2002) was conducted to characterize seasonal and sub-seasonal stream energy budget and thermal dynamics.
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Using stable isotope tracers to assess hydrological flow paths, residence times and landscape influences in a nested mesoscale catchment

TL;DR: In this paper, δ18O measurements in precipitation and stream waters were used to investigate hydrological flow paths and residence times at nested spatial scales in the mesoscale (233 km2) River Feugh catchment in the northeast of Scotland over the 2001-2002 Hydrological year.
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Survival of salmonid eggs in a degraded gravel‐bed stream: effects of groundwater–surface water interactions

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of hyporheic water quality on developing salmonids was assessed between spawning and hatch, and results from a low-lying degraded agricultural catchment (Newmills Burn) were compared with those from a near-pristine upland spawning stream (Girnock Burn).