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W. L. Hogarth

Researcher at University of Newcastle

Publications -  108
Citations -  2666

W. L. Hogarth is an academic researcher from University of Newcastle. The author has contributed to research in topics: Erosion & Surface runoff. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 108 publications receiving 2539 citations. Previous affiliations of W. L. Hogarth include Cornell University & Information Technology University.

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Anaemia of acute malaria infections in non-immune patients primarily results from destruction of uninfected erythrocytes.

TL;DR: Fitting of parasitaemia and anaemia data from neurosyphilis patients undergoing malaria therapy to a mathematical model shows that in these patients, an average of 8.5 erythrocytes were destroyed in addition to each ERYthrocyte observed to become parasitized, and showed that dyserythropoiesis plays an insignificant role in the resulting anaemia.
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Drying front in a sloping aquifer: Nonlinear effects

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the point at which the water table h first becomes zero at x = L at time t = t(c) remains fixed at this point for all times t > t (c) and that the drying front recedes downslope as physically expected.
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Rainfall induced chemical transport from soil to runoff: theory and experiments

TL;DR: In this article, a physically based solute transport model that couples both raindrop driven processes and diffusion play important roles in the transfer of chemicals from soil to surface runoff was developed, where all the parameters were either directly measured or previously published.
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Exact nonlinear solution for constant flux infiltration

TL;DR: In this paper, an analytical nonlinear solution to the problem of two phase oil and water infiltration under a constant flux boundary condition was derived, and this solution also applies to the constant infiltration of water by introducing a simple change in the independent variables of space and time.
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Investigating raindrop effects on transport of sediment and non-sorbed chemicals from soil to surface runoff

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple modeling and laboratory investigation was carried out to investigate the raindrop effects on both sediment detachment and chemical transport from soil-water into runoff, and a new approach to chemical transport modeling by linking the rain-controlled processes with similar soil erosion processes.