S
Sergey Chalov
Researcher at Moscow State University
Publications - 119
Citations - 2121
Sergey Chalov is an academic researcher from Moscow State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sediment & Drainage basin. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 103 publications receiving 1492 citations. Previous affiliations of Sergey Chalov include Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Probability assessment of flood and sediment disasters in Japan using the Total Runoff-Integrating Pathways model
Goro Mouri,Daigo Minoshima,Valentin Golosov,Sergey Chalov,Shinta Seto,Kei Yoshimura,Shinichiro Nakamura,Taikan Oki +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the probability of flood disaster occurrence using the TRIP model for Japan (J-TRIP), a river routing scheme that provides a digital river network covering Japan.
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessment of runoff, water and sediment quality in the Selenga River basin aided by a web-based geoservice
Daniel Karthe,Daniel Karthe,Sergey Chalov,Vsevolod Moreido,Margarita Pashkina,Anna O. Romanchenko,Gunsmaa Batbayar,Andrei Kalugin,Katja Westphal,Marcus Malsy,Martina Flörke +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess current trends in hydrology and water quality in the Selenga-Baikal basin, identify their drivers and set up models (WaterGAP3 framework and ECOMAG) for the prediction of future changes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dam and reservoir removal projects: a mix of social-ecological trends and cost-cutting attitudes.
Michał Habel,Karl Mechkin,Krescencja Podgorska,Marius Saunes,Zygmunt Babiński,Sergey Chalov,Damian Absalon,Zbigniew Podgórski,Krystian Obolewski +8 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that the removal of dams on rivers and their connected reservoirs applies predominantly to smaller structures (< 2.5 m), providing an important conclusion that dams and reservoirs should be considered with regard to the interrelations between people and the environment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Channel changes in largest Russian rivers: natural and anthropogenic effects
TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive analysis of channel changes (horizontal and vertical movements of channel boundaries due to water flow and sediment transport interactions) in rivers across Russia is provided, which indicates that the largest Russian rivers (Volga, Oka, Amur) are sensitive to mostly human impacts (reservoir construction, in-channel quarries, land disturbance and bank fortification).
Journal ArticleDOI
Integrating multi-scale data for the assessment of water availability and quality in the kharaa—orkhon—selenga river system
Daniel Karthe,Nikolay Kasimov,Sergey Chalov,Galina Shinkareva,Marcus Malsy,Lucas Menzel,Philipp Theuring,Melanie Hartwig,Christian Schweitzer,Jürgen Hofmann,Jörg A. Priess,Mikhail Lychagin +11 more
TL;DR: In this article, the results from the micro (experimental plots, individual point data), meso (Kharaa River Basin), and macro (Selenge River Basin) scales were combined for the Kharaa - Orkhon - Selenga River system.