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Ciaran J. Harman

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University

Publications -  90
Citations -  5472

Ciaran J. Harman is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Water balance & Streamflow. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 79 publications receiving 4499 citations. Previous affiliations of Ciaran J. Harman include University of Arizona & University of Canberra.

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The future of hydrology: an evolving science for a changing world.

TL;DR: For a long-term initiative to address the regional implications of environmental change, hydrologists must become both synthesists and analysts, understanding the functioning of individual system components, while operating firmly within a well-designed hypothesis testing framework.
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“Panta Rhei—Everything Flows”: Change in hydrology and society—The IAHS Scientific Decade 2013–2022

Alberto Montanari, +36 more
TL;DR: The Panta Rhei Everything Flows project as mentioned in this paper is dedicated to research activities on change in hydrology and society, which aims to reach an improved interpretation of the processes governing the water cycle by focusing on their changing dynamics in connection with rapidly changing human systems.
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Time-variable transit time distributions and transport: Theory and application to storage-dependent transport of chloride in a watershed

TL;DR: In this article, a general approach to modeling unsteady transport through an arbitrary control volume (such as a watershed) that accounts for temporal variability in the underlying transport dynamics was developed.
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Geophysical imaging reveals topographic stress control of bedrock weathering

TL;DR: Three-dimensional stress calculations predict that tectonic stresses interact with topography to influence bedrock disaggregation, groundwater flow, chemical weathering, and the depth of the “critical zone” in which many biogeochemical processes occur.
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Climate and vegetation water use efficiency at catchment scales

TL;DR: Troch et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed SAHRA (Sustainability of semi-arid hydrology and riparian areas), which is a semiarid water management model.