American Association of Geographers American Association of Geographers
2009 Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV Online Program
Paper Session:

3454 Hydroclimatology I

is scheduled on Tuesday, 3/24/09, from 1:00 PM - 2:40 PM in North Hall N115, Las Vegas Convention Center

Sponsorship(s):
Climate Specialty Group
Water Resources Specialty Group
Cryosphere Specialty Group

Organizer(s):
Timothy W Hawkins - Shippensburg University
Steven Quiring - Texas A&M University

Chair(s):
Timothy W Hawkins - Shippensburg University

Abstract(s):
 
1:00 PM   Author(s): *Stefan Becker - University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Heike Hartmann - Institut für Geographie, Justus Liebig Universität Giessen, Germany
Tong Jiang - Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, People’s Republic of China

 Abstract Title: Quasi Periodicities of Extreme Precipitation Events in the Yangtze River Basin, China

1:20 PM   Author(s): *Heike Hartmann - Justus Liebig University Giessen
Stefan Becker - University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Lorenz King - Justus Liebig University Giessen
Tong Jiang - Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing

 Abstract Title: Neural Network-Based Prediction of Water Levels at the Yangtze River's Upper Reaches

1:40 PM   Author(s): *John D Lenters - University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Kathleen D Holman - University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jun Wang - University of Nebraska-Lincoln

 Abstract Title: Long-term trends in the energy balance and hydroclimate of a north temperate lake

2:00 PM   Author(s): *Yongkang Xue - UCLA
Fernando De Sales - UCLA
Ratko Basic - NCEP
Carlos Roberto Mechoso - UCLA
Akio Arakawa - UCLA
steve Prince - University of Maryland

 Abstract Title: Global spatial and Temporal Characteristics of hydroclimate/Vegetation Biophysical Process Interactions

2:20 PM   Author(s): *Timothy W Hawkins - Shippensburg University

 Abstract Title: Relationships between Hydroclimate and Land Use-Land Cover in the United States




Session Description: Presented are papers focusing on any aspect of hydroclimatology, including measurement/observation, analysis, modeling, and remote sensing of various aspects of precipitation (both rain and snow), soil moisture, evapotranspiration, runoff, and stream flow. Papers that address advances in monitoring, modeling, or predicting extreme hydrologic events (e.g., droughts and floods) are also of interest.
  

(54) 2009 Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV