91̽»¨

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91̽»¨ faculty members are able to provide background on the ways local watersheds have been managed, the effects of land-use changes on watersheds and other information concerning flooding and landslides as the region continues to experience wet, winter weather.



Robert Naiman
Professor of aquatic and fishery sciences, 91̽»¨
Office 206-685-2025
naiman@u.washington.edu
Structure and dynamics of streams and rivers, aquatic ecology, watershed management and the environmental consequences of changing water regimes.


Derek Booth
Research professor of civil and environmental engineering, 91̽»¨
Office 206-543-7923
dbooth@u.washington.edu
Analysis of consequences of geologic processes and materials on land-use — stream channels, river systems, hillslope stability, erosion, and groundwater; measurement and prediction of sediment transport in streams; development and execution of monitoring programs; prediction of future hazards to human activity and resources as a result of ongoing urban development.


David Montgomery
Professor of Earth and space sciences, 91̽»¨
Office 206-685-2560
dave@ess.washington.edu
Landslides, floods, geomorphic processes, the impacts of natural and anthropogenic disturbance, and the development of practical methods for minimizing land use disturbance.


Susan Bolton
Professor of forest resources, 91̽»¨
Office 206-685-7651
sbolton@u.washington.edu
Surface water hydrology, watershed management and modeling, and land-water interactions.


Kathy Troost
Research scientist in Earth and space sciences, 91̽»¨
Office 206-616-9769
ktroost@u.washington.edu
Mudslides in Puget Sound area: causes, settings, distributions, sizes and can provide graphics


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