All Stories

  1. Climate change will reduce North American inland wetland areas and disrupt their seasonal regimes
  2. Disentangling the hydrological and hydraulic controls on streamflow variability in Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM) V2 – a case study in the Pantanal region
  3. Ensemble modeling of global lake evaporation under climate change
  4. Understanding the compound flood risk along the coast of the contiguous United States
  5. Topological Relationship‐Based Flow Direction Modeling: Stream Burning and Depression Filling
  6. Current and future global lake methane emissions: A process‐based modeling analysis
  7. Understanding the Compound Flood Risk along the Coast of the Contiguous United States
  8. Physics‐Informed Neural Networks of the Saint‐Venant Equations for Downscaling a Large‐Scale River Model
  9. Investigating coastal backwater effects and flooding in the coastal zone using a global river transport model on an unstructured mesh
  10. Topological relationship-based flow direction modeling: stream burning and depression filling
  11. Investigating coastal backwater effects and flooding in the coastal zone using a global river transport model on an unstructured mesh
  12. AWESOME: Archive for Water Erosion and Sediment Outflow MEasurements
  13. Median bed-material sediment particle size across rivers in the contiguous US
  14. A new large-scale suspended sediment model and its application over the United States
  15. Advances in hexagon mesh-based flow direction modeling
  16. Representing global soil erosion and sediment flux in Earth System Models
  17. Winter inverse lake stratification under historic and future climate change
  18. Author Correction: Attribution of global lake systems change to anthropogenic forcing
  19. Attribution of global lake systems change to anthropogenic forcing
  20. Trade‐offs of forest management scenarios on forest carbon exchange and threatened and endangered species habitat
  21. A new large-scale suspended sediment model and its application over the United States
  22. Median bed-material sediment particle size across rivers in the contiguous U.S.
  23. Intercomparison of Thermal Regime Algorithms in 1‐D Lake Models
  24. Increased extreme rains intensify erosional nitrogen and phosphorus fluxes to the northern Gulf of Mexico in recent decades
  25. Phenological shifts in lake stratification under climate change
  26. 'Unified' unstructured ocean, land and river modelling in the coastal zone
  27. Validation and Sensitivity Analysis of a 1‐D Lake Model Across Global Lakes
  28. <i>SoilErosionDB</i>: A global database for surface runoff and soil erosion evaluation
  29. Global heat uptake by inland waters
  30. Rising methane emissions from Finnish lakes due to climate warming and increasing ice-free days
  31. A substantial role of soil erosion in the land carbon sink and its future changes
  32. Parameterizing Perennial Bioenergy Crops in Version 5 of the Community Land Model Based on Site‐Level Observations in the Central Midwestern United States
  33. Flood Inundation Generation Mechanisms and Their Changes in 1953‐2004 in Global Major River Basins
  34. Tundra landscape heterogeneity, not interannual variability, controls the decadal regional carbon balance in the Western Russian Arctic
  35. Modeling Sediment Yield in Land Surface and Earth System Models: Model Comparison, Development, and Evaluation
  36. A Small Temperate Lake in the 21st Century: Dynamics of Water Temperature, Ice Phenology, Dissolved Oxygen, and Chlorophyll a
  37. A Global Data Analysis for Representing Sediment and Particulate Organic Carbon Yield in Earth System Models
  38. Modeling CO2 emissions from Arctic lakes
  39. Detectability of Arctic methane sources at six sites performing continuous atmospheric measurements
  40. Constrain pan-Arctic methane emissions using satellite observations
  41. Do maize models capture the impacts of heat and drought stresses on yield? Using algorithm ensembles to identify successful approaches
  42. Methane emissions from pan‐Arctic lakes during the 21st century: An analysis with process‐based models of lake evolution and biogeochemistry
  43. Mapping pan-Arctic methane emissions at high spatial resolution using an adjoint atmospheric transport and inversion method and process-based wetland and lake biogeochemical models
  44. Arctic lakes are continuous methane sources
  45. Modeling methane emissions from lakes
  46. An analysis of atmospheric CH4 concentrations from 1984 to 2008 with a single box atmospheric chemistry model