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Lancaster, S.T. and Casebeer, N.E., 2007.
Sediment storage and evacuation in headwater valleys at the transition between debris-flow
and fluvial processes. Geology, 35(11), 1027-1030.
Reprint. Supplementary material.
Wallick, J.R.,
G.E. Grant, S.T. Lancaster, J.P. Bolte, and R.P. Denlinger, 2007.
Patterns and controls on historical channel change in the Willamette
River, Oregon, USA, in Large Rivers: Geomorphology and Management, edited by A. Gupta,
pp. 491-516, John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken. Reprint
Clevis, Q., G.E. Tucker, G. Lock, S.T. Lancaster, N.
Gasparini, A. Desitter, and R.L. Bras, 2006. Geoarchaeological
simulation of meandering river deposits and settlement
distributions: A three-dimensional approach, Geoarchaeology: An
International Journal, 21(8), 843-874,
doi:10.1002/gea.20142. Reprint
Wallick, J.R., S.T. Lancaster, and J.P. Bolte, 2006.
Determination of bank erodibility for natural and anthropogenic bank
materials using a model of lateral migration & observed erosion
along the Willamette River, Oregon, USA, River Research and
Applications, 22(6), 631-649, DOI: 10.1002/rra.925. Reprint
Clevis, Q, G.E. Tucker, S.T. Lancaster, A. Desitter,
N. Gasparini, and G. Lock, 2006. A simple algorithm for the mapping
of TIN data onto a static grid: Applied to the stratigraphic
simulation of river meander deposits. Computers &
Geosciences, 32(6), 749-766, doi:10.1016/j.cageo.2005.05.012.
Reprint
Lancaster, S.T., and G.E. Grant, 2006. Debris dams
and the relief of headwater streams, Geomorphology, 82
(special issue on bedrock rivers, edited by P.A. Carling), 84-97,
doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2005.08.020. Reprint
Lancaster, S.T., S.K. Hayes, and G.E. Grant, 2003.
Effects of wood on debris flow runout in small mountain watersheds,
Water Resources Research, 39(6), 1168,
doi:10.1029/2001WR001227. Reprint
(Copyright 2003, American Geophysical Union. Further reproduction or
electronic distribution is not permitted.)
Lancaster, S.T., and G.E. Grant, 2003. You want me to predict what? in
Prediction in Geomorphology, edited by P.R. Wilcock and R.M.
Iverson, pp. 41-50 (DOI: 10.1029/135GM04), American Geophysical
Union, Washington. Preprint
Lancaster ST and Bras RL, 2002. A simple model of river meandering and its
comparison to natural channels, Hydrological Processes, 16,
1-26. Reprint
Lancaster, S.T., S.K. Hayes, and G.E. Grant, 2001. Modeling sediment and
wood storage and dynamics in small mountainous watersheds, in
Geomorphic Processes and Riverine Habitat, J.M. Dorava, D.R.
Montgomery, B.B. Palcsak, and F.A. Fitzpatrick (eds.), pp. 85-102,
American Geophysical Union, Washington. Reprint
Tucker, G.E., S.T. Lancaster, N.M. Gasparini, R.L.
Bras, and S.M. Rybarczyk, 2001. An object-oriented framework for
hydrologic and geomorphic modeling using triangulated irregular
networks, Computers and Geosciences, 27(8), 959-973. Reprint
Tucker, G.E., S.T. Lancaster, N.M. Gasparini, and
R.L. Bras, 2001. The channel-hillslope integrated landscape
development (CHILD) model, in Landscape Erosion and Evolution
Modeling, edited by R.S. Harmon and W.W. Doe, III, pp. 349-388,
Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York. Preprint
text (pdf) and figures
with captions (pdf)
Lancaster, S.T., R. Haggerty, S.V. Gregory, K.T. Farthing, L. Ashkenas, and S. Biorn-Hansen, 2005. Investigation of the Temperature Impact of Hyporheic Flow: Using Groundwater and Heat Flow Modeling and GIS Analyses to Evaluate Temperature Mitigation Strategies on the Willamette River, Oregon. Final Report, Oregon State University, Corvallis, 104 pp. Electronic copy
Lancaster, S.T., 1998. A Nonlinear River Meandering Model and its Incorporation in a Landscape Evolution Model, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge (abstract).
*See my CV (at the link above) for a complete list of publications.
© Stephen
Lancaster
Last modified: Mon Sep 17 01:10:24 PDT 2007