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Publications
Publications (13)
Soil erosion is a significant environmental issue worldwide. It affects water quality, biodiversity, and land productivity. New Zealand government agencies and regional councils work to mitigate soil erosion through policies, management programmes, and funding for soil conservation projects. Information about cost-effectiveness is crucial for plann...
Suspended fine sediment has a significant impact on freshwater quality variables such as visual clarity (VC). However, freshwater quality is related to the attributes of the catchment sources contributing fine sediment to the stream network. Here, the extent to which an array of sources defined spatially according to erosion process and geological...
Sediment fingerprinting estimates the proportional contribution of fine sediment from distinct catchment sources delivered to downstream receiving environments. Increased attention has focused on assessing the accuracy of source contribution estimates, particularly in relation to tracer selection and statistical un-mixing procedures. However, no st...
Sediment fingerprinting has been widely used to distinguish discrete sediment sources; however, application to intra‐storm sediment source variability has received relatively little focus despite the benefit being long recognized. In this investigation, sediment fingerprinting was applied to a 53‐hr storm event sampled hourly to determine sediment...
Reducing soil erosion and sediment delivery into rivers is a major aim for land management in New Zealand. Therefore, it is important to identify areas of sediment generation and their relationship to in‐stream suspended sediment concentrations and water‐quality attributes. It is possible to infer and assess sediment sources and dynamics using stor...
Deforestation in New Zealand has led to increased soil erosion and sediment loads in rivers, adversely affecting aquatic ecosystems. Soil conservation actions over large areas are expensive and need to be targeted to obtain maximum benefit for least cost. Medium-complexity models of soil erosion have been used to target soil conservation, but they...
Fine sediment is a dynamic component of the fluvial system, contributing to the physical form, chemistry and ecological health of a river. It is important to understand rates and patterns of sediment delivery, transport and deposition. Sediment fingerprinting is a means of directly determining sediment sources via their geochemical properties, but...
River management in New Zealand's laterally active gravelly rivers has permitted floodplain development and protection of agricultural resources and infrastructure. Management of these dynamic systems has been hailed as a success for the approaches adopted, namely straightening and confining the river using bank protection. However, this activity a...
This paper describes the structural glaciology of the lower Fox Glacier, a 12.7 km-long valley glacier draining the western side of the Southern Alps, New Zealand. Field data are combined with analysis of aerial photographs to present a structural interpretation of a 5 km-long segment covering the lower trunk of the glacier, from the upper icefall...