Searched for: subject%3A%22science%22
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van de Giesen, N.C. (author)
A model has been devised that quantitatively describes how the shape of a river delta is affected by sediments, tides and waves. It reveals that the area of delta land is increasing globally, as a result of human activities upstream.
journal article 2020
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Davids, J.C. (author), Devkota, Nischal (author), Pandey, Anusha (author), Prajapati, Rajaram (author), Ertis, Brandon A. (author), Rutten, M.M. (author), Lyon, Steve W. (author), Bogaard, T.A. (author), van de Giesen, N.C. (author)
Citizen science, as a complement to ground-based and remotely-sensed precipitation measurements, is a promising approach for improving precipitation observations. During the 2018 monsoon (May to September), SmartPhones4Water (S4W) Nepal—a young researcher-led water monitoring network—partnered with 154 citizen scientists to generate 6,656...
journal article 2019
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Hut, R.W. (author), van de Giesen, N.C. (author), Drost, N (author)
The suggestions by Hutton et al. might not be enough to guarantee reproducible computational hydrology. Archiving software code and research data alone will not be enough. We add to the suggestion of Hutton et al. that hydrologists not only document their (computer) work, but that hydrologists use the latest best practices in designing...
journal article 2017
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Davids, J.C. (author), van de Giesen, N.C. (author), Rutten, M.M. (author)
Hydrologic data has traditionally been collected with permanent installations of sophisticated and accurate but expensive monitoring equipment at limited numbers of sites. Consequently, observation frequency and costs are high, but spatial coverage of the data is limited. Citizen Hydrology can possibly overcome these challenges by leveraging...
journal article 2017
Searched for: subject%3A%22science%22
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