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Journal ArticleDOI

River flow forecasting through conceptual models part I — A discussion of principles☆

J.E. Nash, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1970 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 3, pp 282-290
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TLDR
In this article, the principles governing the application of the conceptual model technique to river flow forecasting are discussed and the necessity for a systematic approach to the development and testing of the model is explained and some preliminary ideas suggested.
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This article is published in Journal of Hydrology.The article was published on 1970-04-01. It has received 19601 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Conceptual model & Flood forecasting.

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Impact of climate change on the hydrology of St. Lawrence tributaries

TL;DR: In this paper, the St. Lawrence tributaries of the Canadian province of Quebec were modeled with the HSAMI run with six climate series projections and the projected daily climate series were produced using the historical data of a reference period (1961-1990) with a perturbation factor equivalent to the monthly mean difference (temperature and precipitation) between a GCM in the future for three 30-year horizons (2010-2039, 2040-2069; 2070-2099) and the reference period.
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Event and Continuous Hydrologic Modeling with HEC-HMS

TL;DR: In this paper, a joint event and continuous hydrologic modeling with the Hydrologic Engineering Center (HEC-HMS) is discussed and an application to the Mona Lake watershed in west Michigan is presented.
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Towards the implementation of the European Water Framework Directive?: Lessons learned from water quality simulations in an agricultural watershed

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed consecutive land use and management scenarios on the basis of policy instruments such as the support of agro-environmental measures by Common Agricultural Policy and regional landscape development programs.
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Modeling slump of ready mix concrete using genetic algorithms assisted training of Artificial Neural Networks

TL;DR: By hybridizing ANN with GA, the convergence speed of ANN and its accuracy of prediction can be improved and the trained hybrid model can be used for predicting slump of concrete for a given concrete design mix in quick time without performing multiple trials with different design mix proportions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Automated Geospatial Watershed Assessment tool

TL;DR: A toolkit for distributed hydrologic modeling at multiple scales using two independent models within a geographic information system is presented and examples of the use of AGWA for watershed modeling and assessment at a range of scales are described.
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