sarah linfield (brown) lewis - watershed processes...

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Sarah Linfield Brown Lewis Senior Faculty Research Assistant II College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences Oregon State University Phone: 541-750-7325 (w) 541-754-6345 (h) Email: [email protected] (w) [email protected] (h) google scholar profile Watershed Processes Group website I. EDUCATION M.S., Geology, University of Vermont, 1999. Advisor: Paul Bierman; Thesis title: Terrestrial Sediment Deposits in Ritterbush Pond: Implications for Holocene Storm Frequency in Northern Vermont B.S. cum laude, Geological Sciences and Environmental Studies, Tufts University 1996. II. RESEARCH POSITIONS Senior Faculty Research Assistant II, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 2017- Present. All duties of SFRA I listed below, and: Responsible for initiating and developing new projects as Senior Personnel on collaborative research and workshops with Federal, State and University partners. Acts with autonomy for research direction and scope of activities within broad research objectives defined by project PIs (various). Senior Faculty Research Assistant I, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 2009-2017. Provides broad support for collaborative research, including pilot studies, grant writing, field work, data analysis and interpretation, figure and graphics development and manuscript preparation. Routinely contributes to and prepares talks and posters for collaborators to present at national and international conferences, and provides assistance and feedback to students. Manages the Watershed Processes Group (WPG) including all aspects of administration (hiring, budgeting, data and grant management), and outreach (website, publication and presentation). Organizes and facilitates regular meetings (WPG graduate students), seminars (Geomorphology Round Table) and conferences (Bretz Club) to promote research excellence and collaboration within the hydro-geomorphic community. Supervisor: Dr. Gordon Grant Faculty Research Assistant Department of Geosciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis Oregon 2001-2009. Supported researchers studying water-related problems in the Pacific Northwest, through coordination and assistance with fieldwork, data analysis and report writing, preparation of graphics for presentation and publication, scheduling research group meetings and maintaining the research group web site. Supervisor: Dr. Gordon Grant Project Geologist, Terrasearch, Inc. San Jose, California. 1999-2001. Responsible for planning and completion of a wide variety of assignments in geotechnical engineering and environmental geology for residential and commercial development projects. Supervisor: Tom Makdissy, PE

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Page 1: Sarah Linfield (Brown) Lewis - Watershed Processes Groupwpg.forestry.oregonstate.edu/sites/wpg/files/cv/Lewis_CV_all_2018_… · Sarah Linfield Brown Lewis Senior Faculty Research

Sarah Linfield Brown Lewis Senior Faculty Research Assistant II

College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences

Oregon State University

Phone: 541-750-7325 (w) 541-754-6345 (h)

Email: [email protected] (w) [email protected] (h)

google scholar profile

Watershed Processes Group website

I. EDUCATION

M.S., Geology, University of Vermont, 1999.

Advisor: Paul Bierman; Thesis title: Terrestrial Sediment Deposits in Ritterbush Pond:

Implications for Holocene Storm Frequency in Northern Vermont

B.S. cum laude, Geological Sciences and Environmental Studies, Tufts University 1996.

II. RESEARCH POSITIONS

Senior Faculty Research Assistant II, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 2017-

Present. All duties of SFRA I listed below, and: Responsible for initiating and

developing new projects as Senior Personnel on collaborative research and workshops

with Federal, State and University partners. Acts with autonomy for research direction

and scope of activities within broad research objectives defined by project PIs (various).

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 2009-2017.

Provides broad support for collaborative research, including pilot studies, grant writing,

field work, data analysis and interpretation, figure and graphics development and

manuscript preparation. Routinely contributes to and prepares talks and posters for

collaborators to present at national and international conferences, and provides assistance

and feedback to students. Manages the Watershed Processes Group (WPG) including all

aspects of administration (hiring, budgeting, data and grant management), and outreach

(website, publication and presentation). Organizes and facilitates regular meetings (WPG

graduate students), seminars (Geomorphology Round Table) and conferences (Bretz

Club) to promote research excellence and collaboration within the hydro-geomorphic

community. Supervisor: Dr. Gordon Grant

Faculty Research Assistant Department of Geosciences, Oregon State University,

Corvallis Oregon 2001-2009. Supported researchers studying water-related problems in

the Pacific Northwest, through coordination and assistance with fieldwork, data analysis

and report writing, preparation of graphics for presentation and publication, scheduling

research group meetings and maintaining the research group web site. Supervisor: Dr.

Gordon Grant

Project Geologist, Terrasearch, Inc. San Jose, California. 1999-2001. Responsible for

planning and completion of a wide variety of assignments in geotechnical engineering

and environmental geology for residential and commercial development projects.

Supervisor: Tom Makdissy, PE

Page 2: Sarah Linfield (Brown) Lewis - Watershed Processes Groupwpg.forestry.oregonstate.edu/sites/wpg/files/cv/Lewis_CV_all_2018_… · Sarah Linfield Brown Lewis Senior Faculty Research

Sarah L. Lewis

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I Page 2

Staff Scientist Intern, Stone Environmental, Inc. Montpelier, Vermont. 1998. Performed

spatial analysis of soils data using GIS. Created databases and figures for environmental

assessment reports.

Field Researcher, U.S. Geological Survey, Earthquake Hazards Group, Coastal

Washington. 1998. Coordinated and led tree-coring for investigation of earthquake-

induced tidal forest death. Box sampled marsh outcrops to create sediment peels of

buried tsunami deposits. Supervisor: Dr. Brian Atwater

Summer Field Intern, National Association of Geoscience Teachers / U.S. Geological

Survey Earthquake Hazards Group, Pacific Northwest. 1997. Collected geologic and

biologic evidence for Cascadia subduction zone earthquakes and tsunamis. Performed

marsh surveys at low tide to identify, map, and date buried soil horizons. Responsible for

general camp management and field, office and research support for supervisor.

Supervisor: Dr. Brian Atwater

Graduate Teaching Assistant, Department of Geology, University of Vermont,

Burlington, Vermont. 1996-1998. Developed and implemented curriculum for weekly

labs and field trips. Taught 2-3 labs per semester for Introduction to Geology.

Lab Instructor, Geology Department, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts. 1995-

1996. Taught weekly introductory labs and field trips to classes of 20-30 undergraduate

students in Introductory and Environmental Geology.

Teaching Assistant, Geology Department, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts

1994-1995. Assisted with class and laboratory instruction for Mineralogy and laboratory

instruction and field trips for Introductory and Environmental Geology.

III. FIELDS OF SPECIALIZATION

Fluvial geomorphology, including the influence of extreme events (floods, droughts) on

landscape evolution.

Hydrology, specifically the response of Pacific Northwest streams to climate change.

IV. SELECT ANALYTICAL AND TECHNICAL SKILLS

Streamflow gage installation and maintenance (stage height and water temperature):

TruTrack capacitance rods, Onset temperature loggers (Hobo & Tidbit) and pressure

transducers, and Solinst Leveloggers & Baraloggers.

Streamflow measurements: Marsh McBirney Flowmate, SonTek Flowtracker and River

Surveyor, salt tracer tests.

Hydrologic Analysis, including rating curve development, flood frequency analysis.

Expert in Microsoft Office Software; proficient in Adobe Creative Suite, Sigmaplot,

ArcGIS, R, Surfer and Drupal web design. Comfortable on both PC and Apple operating

systems.

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Sarah L. Lewis

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I Page 3

V. PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

1. Publications

A) In prep

(1) Grant, G., Lewis, S.L, Safeeq, M and Hayes, S.,. Disentangling effects of forest

harvest on long-term hydrologic and sediment dynamics, Western Cascades,

Oregon, in preparation for submission to Water Resources Research

(2) Hempel, LA, Hassan, M, Eaton, BE, Grant, GE, Lewis, S. Hydrograph shape

controls channel morphology and organization in a sand-gravel flume, in

preparation

(3) Hempel, LA, Grant, GE, Lewis, S. Woody debris architecture and channel

morphology in mountain streams reflect differences in hydrologic regime, in

preparation

B) In review

(1) Flitcroft, R.L., Lewis, S.L., Arismendi, A., Safeeq, M., Davis, C., Giannico, G.,

Penaluna, B., Santelmann, M., Snyder, J. Using expressed behavior to evaluate

vulnerability of Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) upriver migrants to future

hydrologic regimes: management implications and conservation planning, in review

with Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems

C) Refereed Publications

(1) Nash, C.S., Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L., Selker, J. and Noel, P., 2018. A theoretical

framework for evaluating hydrologic changes in restored wet meadows.

EcoHydrology DOI:10.1002/eco.1953

(2) Luce, C., Gritzner, J., Grant, G., Crotteau, M.J., Day, K., Lewis, S., Lute, A.,

Halofsky, J.E., Staab, B.P., in press. Chapter: 4 Climate Change, Water, and Roads

in South Central Oregon. In Climate change vulnerability and adaptation in South

Central Oregon. J.E. Halofsky, D.L. Peterson, J.J. Ho Eds. Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-

GTR-XXX. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific

Northwest Research Station.

(3) Grant, G.E., Major, J.J and Lewis, S.L., 2017. The geologic, geomorphic and

hydrologic context underlying options for long-term management of the Spirit Lake

outlet near Mount St. Helens, Washington. Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-954.

Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest

Research Station. 133p.

(4) Flitcroft, R., Lewis, S.L., Arismendi, I., Safeeq, M., Santelmann, M., Grant, G.,

LovellFord, R. 2016, Linking hydroclimate to fish phenology and habitat use with

ichthyographs. PLOS ONE

(5) Safeeq, M. Shukla, S., Arismendi, I., Grant, G. Lewis, S.L., Nolin, A. 2016.

Influence of winter season climate variability on snow-precipitation ratio in the

western U.S, International Journal of Climatology 36, 3175-3190. DOI:

10.1002/joc.4545.

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Sarah L. Lewis

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I Page 4

(6) Safeeq, M., Grant, G., Lewis, S.L., Staab, B. 2015. Predicting landscape sensitivity

to present and future floods in the Pacific Northwest, USA. Hydrological Processes

29:5337-5353. DOI: 10.1002/hyp.10553.

(7) Grant, G. Lewis, S., 2015., The Remains of the Dam: What have we learned from

15 years of US dam removals, in River Basins, Reservoir Sedimentation and Water

Resources Lolino, G., Arattano M., Rinaldi, M., Guistolisi, O., Marechal, J.C., and

Grant, G.E. Eds. Engineering Geology for Society and Territory, Volume 3,

Springer, Switzerland, p31-35.

(8) Grant, G. Lewis, S., Stewart, G. and Glasmann, J.R., 2015. Sediment problems and

consequences during temporary drawdown of a large flood control reservoir for

environmental retrofitting, in River Basins, Reservoir Sedimentation and Water

Resources Lolino, G., Arattano M., Rinaldi, M., Guistolisi, O., Marechal, J.C., and

Grant, G.E. Eds. Engineering Geology for Society and Territory, Volume 3,

Springer, Switzerland, p27-30.

(9) Safeeq, M., Grant G., Lewis, S., Kramer, M., Staab, B., 2014. A geohydrologic

framework for characterizing summer streamflow sensitivity to climate warming in

the Pacific Northwest, USA. Hydrology and Earth Systems Sciences 18, 1-18.

DOI: 10.5194/hessd-18-3693-2014.

(10) Safeeq, M. Grant, G., Lewis, S. and Tague, C. 2013. Coupling Snowpack and

Groundwater Dynamics to Interpret Historical Streamflow Trends in the Western

United States. Hydrological Processes 27:655-668. DOI:10.1002/hyp.9628

(11) Nolin, A.W., Phillippe, J., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S.L.2010. Present-day and Future

Contributions of Glacier Melt to a Summertime Flows in a Pacific Northwest

Watershed: Implications for Water Management, Water Resources Research, DOI:

10.1029/2009WR008968. 14p

(12) Jefferson, A., Grant, G., Lancaster, S., and Lewis, S.L., 2010, Coevolution of

hydrology and topography on a basalt landscape in the Oregon Cascade Range,

USA, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms DOI: 10.1002/esp.1976. 14p.

(13) Grant, Gordon E.; Lewis, Sarah L.; Swanson, Frederick J.; Cissel, John H.;

McDonnell, Jeffrey J. 2008. Effects of forest practices on peak flows and

consequent channel response: a state-of-science report for western Oregon and

Washington. Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-760. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of

Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 76p.

(14) Jefferson, A., Nolin, A., Lewis, S., and Tague, C., 2008. Hydrogeologic controls on

streamflow sensitivity to climatic variability, Hydrological Processes 22(22): 4371-

4385 DOI: 10.1002/hyp.7041.

(15) Grant, G.E., Marr, J.D.G., Hill C., Johnson, S., Campbell K., Mohseni, O., Wallick,

J.R., Lewis, S.L., O’Connor, J.E., Major, J.J., and Burkholder, B.K. 2008.

Experimental and field observations of breach dynamics accompanying erosion of

Marmot cofferdam, Sandy River, Oregon. Proceedings of the World Environmental

and Water Resources Congress, Ahupua'a Hawaii. American Society of Civil

Engineers.

(16) Tague, C., Farrell, M., Grant, G. Lewis, S. and Rey, S. 2007. Hydrogeologic

controls on summer stream temperatures in the McKenzie River basin, Oregon,

Hydrologic Processes 21: 3288–3300.

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Sarah L. Lewis

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I Page 5

(17) Jefferson, A., Grant, G., and Lewis, S., 2007. A river runs underneath it: geological

control of spring and channel systems and management implications, Cascade

Range, Oregon. In M.J. Furniss, C.F. Clifton, and K.L. Ronnenberg, eds.

Advancing the Fundamental Sciences: proceedings of the Forest Service national

earth sciences conference. PNW-GTR-689. Portland, OR: U.S.D.A. Forest Service,

PNW Research Station. p391-400.

(18) Grant, G.E., Schmidt, J.C. and Lewis, S.L. 2003. A Geological Framework for

Interpreting Downstream Effects of Dams on Rivers in J.E. O'Connor and G.E.

Grant eds. A Peculiar River. American Geophysical Union, p209-225.

(19) Brown, S.L., Bierman, P.R., Lini, A., Davis, P.T. and Southon, J., 2002. Lake cores

as archives of Holocene watershed erosion events: Journal of Paleolimnology, v.28,

no.2 p.219-236.

(20) Benson, B.E., Atwater, B.F., Yamaguchi, D.K., Amidon, L.J., Brown, S.L., and

Lewis, R.C., 2001. Renewal of tidal forests in Washington state after a subduction

earthquake in A.D. 1700: Quaternary Research, v. 56, no. 2, p.139-147.

(21) Bierman, P. R., Brown, S., Bryan, K., Lini, A., Nichols, K., Wright, S., Whalen, T.,

Zehfuss, P., Davis, P.T., 2001. Post-glacial Surface Processes of northern New

England. In Geological Society of America Field Trip Guide, Boston 2001.

(22) Brown, S.L., Bierman, P.R., Lini, A, and Southon, J., 2000. 10 000 yr record of

extreme hydrologic events: Geology, v.28, p.335-338.

(23) Ridge, J.C., Besonen, M.R., Brochu, M., Brown, S., Callahan, J.W., Cook, G.J.,

Nicholson, R.S., and Toll, N.J., 1999. Varve, paleomagnetic, and 14C chronologies

for late Pleistocene events in New Hampshire and Vermont: Geographie physique

et Quaternaire, v. 53, p.79-106.

(24) Ridge, J.C., Thompson, W.B., Brochu, M., Brown, S. Fowler, B. Glacial geology of

the upper Connecticut Valley in the vicinity of the lower Ammonoosuc and

Passumpsic Valleys of New Hampshire and Vermont. In Guidebook to Field Trips

in Northern New Hampshire and Adjacent Regions of Maine and Vermont: New

England Intercollegiate Geologic Conference, 88th Annual Meeting, p309-340.

D) Technical Reports

(1) Grant, G., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A., Tague, C. and Farrell, M., 2007. Discharge,

source areas, and water ages of spring-fed streams and implications for water

management in the McKenzie River Basin. Report to Eugene Water and Electric

Board, April 9, 2007.

(2) Grant, G., Haggerty, R., Lewis, S., Burkholder, B., Wampler, P. 2006. Potential

Effects of gravel augmentation on temperature in the Clackamas River, Oregon.

Report prepared for Portland General Electric, dated June 1, 2006.

(3) Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Grant, G., and Tague, C. 2006. Discharge, source areas,

and water ages of spring-fed streams and implications for water management in the

McKenzie River Basin. Report to Eugene Water and Electric Board, February 3,

2006.

(4) Lewis S.L., Grant, G.E., and Stewart, G. 2005. Literature Review of Possible

Effects of Gravel Augmentation on Stream Temperature. Report prepared for

Portland General Electric, dated March 7, 2005.

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Sarah L. Lewis

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I Page 6

(5) Grant, G., Jefferson, A and Lewis, S., 2004. Discharge, source areas, and water

ages of spring-fed streams and implications for water management in the

McKenzie River Basin. Report to Eugene Water and Electric Board, April 14,

2004.

(6) Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. and Kast, P., 2002. Sediment Mass Balance for Cougar

Reservoir Sediment Releases. Report prepared for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,

Portland District Office, dated November 5, 2002.

(7) Stewart, G., Glasmann, J.R., Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. and Ninneman, J., 2002.

Evaluation of Fine Sediment Intrusion into Salmon Spawning Gravels as Related to

Cougar Reservoir Sediment Releases. Report prepared for U.S. Army Corps of

Engineers, Portland District Office, dated October 4, 2002.

E) Published Abstracts

* denotes invited presentation

(1) Nash, C.S., Selker, J.S., Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L., Noel, P. A physical framework

for evaluating net effects of wet meadow restoration on late summer streamflow.

Abstract H53M-07 presented at 2017 AGU Fall Meeting, New Orleans, 11-15 Dec.

(2) Grant, G.E., Hempel, L.A., Marwan, H., Eaton, B.C., Lewis, S. The

geomorphically effective hydrograph: an emerging concept for interpreting channel

morphology and evolution. Abstract EP33D-08 presented at 2017 AGU Fall

Meeting, New Orleans, 11-15 Dec.

(3) Hempel, L.S., Grant, G.E., Eaton, B.C., Marwan, H., Lewis, S. The role of varying

flow on channel morphology: a flume experiment. Abstract EP41A-1829 presented

at 2017 AGU Fall Meeting, New Orleans, 11-15 Dec.

(4) Hempel, L.A., Grant, G.G., and Lewis, S.L. Channel morphology and woody

debris architecture in mountain streams reflect differences in hydrologic regime.

2017 Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, Abstracts with Programs

Vol 49 No 6. Paper No. 72-14.

(5) Grant, G.E., Major J.J., and Lewis, S.L Managing long-term risks from natural

hazards in a dynamic volcanic and institutional environment: the Spirit Lake story.

Abstract NH23C-1878 presented at 2016 AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, Calif.

12-16 Dec.

(6) Jachens, E., Roques, C., Selker, J., Lewis, S., Walter, C., Nolin, A., Grant, G.,

Rupp, D. 2016, A Year without Snow in the Oregon Cascades: Recession Response

of Small Watersheds. Abstract H43E-1499 presented at 2016 AGU Fall Meeting,

San Francisco, Calif. 12-16 Dec.

(7) Nash, C.S., Grant, G.E., Flinchum, B.A., Lancaster, J.D. Holbrook, W.S., Davis,

L.G., Lewis, S.L. A subsurface model of the beaver meadow complex. Abstract

EP42B-07 presented at 2015 AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, Calif. 14-18 Dec.

(8) Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L., Nolin, A.W., Selker, J.S., Hempel, L.A., Walter, C.,

Roques C., Jefferson, A.J., No Snow No Flow?: 2015. How montane stream

networks respond to drought. Abstract H41M-08 presented at AGU Fall Meeting,

San Francisco, Calif. 14-18 Dec.

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Sarah L. Lewis

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I Page 7

(9) Hempel, L.A., Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. 2015. Hydrologic regime controls pattern

and architecture of woody debris in mountain streams. Abstract EP53E-08

presented at 2015 AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, Calif. 14-18 Dec.

(10) Lewis, S.L., Grant, G.E., Nolin, A.W., Hempel, L.A., Jefferson, A.J., Selker, J.S.

How low will they go? The response of headwater streams in the Oregon Cascades

to the 2015 drought. 2015 Geological Society of America Annual Meeting,

Abstracts with Programs Vol 47 No 7 p739. Paper No. 291-28.

(11) Safeeq, M., Grant, G., Lewis, S., Nolin, A., Hempel, L., Cooper, M., Tague, C.N.

Integrated snow and hydrology modeling for climate change impact assessment in

Oregon Cascades. Abstract H43J-1093 presented at 2014 AGU Fall Meeting, San

Francisco, Calif. 15-19 Dec.

(12) Hempel, L. Grant, G., Lewis, S., Safeeq, M. Change in bedload transport frequency

with climate warming in gravel-bed streams of the Oregon Cascades. Abstract

EP33A-3619 presented at 2014 AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, Calif. 15-19

Dec.

(13) Lewis, Sarah L., Safeeq, Mohammad, Grant, Gordon E. Long-term hydrologic and

sediment dynamics: disentangling effects of forest harvest, Western Cascades,

Oregon. 2014 Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, Abstracts with

Programs Vol 46 No 7 p228. Paper No. 87-5.

(14) Grant, Gordon E. and Lewis, Sarah L. Where did the mud go?: the downstream

sedimentary record of upland forest land use.. 2014 Geological Society of America

Annual Meeting, Abstracts with Programs, Vol 46 No 6 p 381. Paper No. 15-5.

(15) Hempel, Laura, Grant, Gordon, and Lewis, Sarah. A comparison of hydrology and

channel hydraulics in headwater streams of the central Oregon Cascades. Abstract

EP53B-0831 presented at 2013 AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, Calif. 9-13 Dec.

(16) Safeeq, Mohammad, Grant, Gordon, Lewis, Sarah and Staab, Brian. Understanding

Atmospheric and Landscape Level Drivers of Peak Flow Variability in the Pacific

Northwest, USA. Abstract H13H-1450 presented at 2013 AGU Fall Meeting, San

Francisco, Calif. 9-13 Dec.

(17) Lewis, Sarah L., Safeeq, Mohammad, Jefferson, Anne J., and Grant, Gordon E.

Revisiting Watershed Drainage Density: New Considerations for Hydrologic

Prediction. 2013 Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, Abstracts with

Programs Vol 45 No 7 p578.

(18) LovellFord, R.M., Flitcroft, R. Santelmann, M.V., Grant, G.E., Safeeq, M., Lewis,

S. Identifying Biologically Relevant Cues in the Hydrologic Regime Abstract

B23D-0484 presented at 2012 AGU Fall Meeting, AGU, San Francisco, Calif., 3-7

Dec.

(19) Safeeq, M., Grant, G.E., Lewis, S., Tague, C. Coupling Snowpack and

Groundwater Dynamics to Interpret Streamflow Trends in the Western United

States. Abstract H41M-04 presented at 2011 Fall Meeting, AGU, San Francisco,

Calif., 5-9 Dec.

(20) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A.J., Tague, C. & Lewis, S. The Great Geologic Sponge:

What do Storage Dynamics Reveal About Runoff Generation in Young Volcanic

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Sarah L. Lewis

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I Page 8

Landscapes? Abstract H131-02 presented at 2010 AGU Fall Meeting, AGU San

Francisco, Calif., 13-17 Dec.

(21) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C. & Lewis, S. It’s Not Just About the Snow: Interactions

Between Snowpack and Groundwater Dynamics Mediate Streamflow Response to

Climate Warming in Mountainous Terrains Abstract C14B-01 presented at 2010

AGU Fall Meeting, AGU San Francisco, Calif., 13-17 Dec.

(22) * Jefferson, A., Grant, G., Lewis, S. 2007. Drainage Density: A Framework for

Predicting Peak and Low Flows in Ungaged Catchments. American Geophysical

Union Fall Meeting, 2007.

(23) Jefferson, A., Nolin, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C. 2007. Groundwater influences

summer streamflow response to climate change in the Oregon Cascades.

Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, Denver, CO. Published as GSA

Abstracts with Programs 39(6): 472.

(24) Grant, G., Jefferson, A., O'Connor, J. and Lewis, S. Drainage density integrates

geology and climate, reflects landscape evolution, and constrains paleoflood

magnitudes, 4th International Paleoflood Workshop, 2007.

(25) Grant, G., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S. Is Geology Destiny? A geologic framework for

predicting streamflows in ungaged catchments. USA Pub (Prediction in Ungaged

Basins) Workshop 2006.

(26) Jefferson, A., Nolin, A., Lewis, S., Payne, M., and Grant, G. Climate variability,

snowmelt distribution, and effects on streamflow in a Cascades watershed, Eastern

Snow Conference, 2006.

(27) *Grant, G., O’Connor, J., Wampler, P., Lancaster, S., Jefferson, A., and Lewis, S.,

Geological controls on the abundance of gravel in rivers, Gravel Bed Rivers 6,

2005.

(28) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. 2005. The role of forests and forest harvest on floods:

myth or reality? International Union of Forest Research Organizations, World

Congress, Brisbane, Australia.

(29) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J.E., Lewis, S. 2004. A Geological Framework for

Interpreting and Predicting the Downstream Geomorphic Response of Rivers to

Dams 32nd International Geological Conference, Florence, Italy.

(30) Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C., Farrell, M. 2004. A River Runs

Underneath It: Geological Control of Spring and Channel Systems and

Management Implications, Cascade Range, Oregon. USFS Conference for Physical

Scientists: Advancing the Fundamental Sciences. San Diego, California.

(31) Jefferson, A., Grant, G., Lewis, S., and Tague, C., Geology broadly predicts

summer streamflow in volcanic terrains: lessons from the Oregon Cascades, AGU

Fall Meeting, 2004.

(32) Farrell, M.J., Tague, C., Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S.L., 2004. The impact

of geologic heterogeneity on stream temperatures in the McKenzie River, Oregon:

implications for climate change and land use, AGU Joint Assembly, 2004.

(33) Tague, C., Grant, G.E., Farrell, M.J., Lewis, S.L., 2003. A Geomorphic Framework

for Identifying Controls on Seasonal Discharge and Stream Temperature Regimes

at Multiple Scales Within the Willamette Basin. AGU Fall Meeting, 2003.

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Sarah L. Lewis

Senior Faculty Research Assistant I Page 9

(34) *Grant, G., Hayes, S., Lewis, S. 2003. Effect of Peak Flow Increases on Sediment

Transport Regimes Following Timber Harvest, Western Cascades, Oregon. First

Interagency Conference on Research in the Watersheds, Benson, Arizona.

(35) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L., 2003. Forging the ecological template: Geomorphic and

hydrologic controls on the structure and organization of channel beds in headwater

streams. GSA Annual Meeting, 2003.

(36) Grant, G., Jefferson, A., O'Connor, J.E., Tague, C., Lewis, S., and Haluska, T.L.,

2003. Drainage network evolution in volcanic landscapes: how much time does it

take to get the river flowing?, GSA Annual Meeting, 2003.

(37) *Grant, G.E. and Lewis, S.L., 2003. Effects of changing flow regime on channel

morphology, sediment transport, and grain size: rethinking what we know.

Instream Flow Workshop, Seattle, Washington.

(38) *Grant, G.E., Stewart, G., Bromley, C., Lewis, S. and Kast, P., 2003. Perspectives

on science and policy issues underlying dam removal: How much do we really

know? AAAS Annual Meeting, Denver, Colorado

(39) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. and O'Connor, J.E., 2002. Magic Carpets and Dirty

Snowballs: An ontology of geophysical disturbance. AGU Fall Meeting, San

Francisco, California.

(40) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Lewis, S.L., Farrell, M. and Kast, P., 2002. Geologic

control of the peak and low flow regimes of the Willamette River and tributaries,

Oregon. AIH Annual Meeting, Portland, Oregon

(41) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C. and Lewis, S.L. 2002. The source of the river: Geologic

control of the hydrologic regime, Willamette River, Oregon. GSA Cordilleran

Section Meeting, Corvallis, Oregon

(42) *Grant, G.E., Stewart, G., Bromley, C., Lewis, S. and Kast, P. 2002

"Deconstructing Rivers: the ecologic, geomorphic and social consequences of dam

removal. ASLO Annual Meeting, Victoria, British Columbia

(43) *Grant, G.E., Hayes, S.K., and Lewis, S., 2002, “Disentangling the effects of peak

flow and sediment production increases due to timber harvest" Symposium on

Small Channel and their Riparian Zones, Forestry Continuing Studies Network of

British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia

(44) Brown, S.L., Bierman, P.R., Mehrtens, C.J., and Lini, A., 1998, Terrigenous layers

in lake cores document fluctuations in New England’s Holocene climate: GSA

Abstracts with Programs, v.30, p.A-114.

(45) Brown, S.L., Bierman, P.R., Mehrtens, C.J., and Lini, A., 1997, Episodic inputs of

terrestrial sediment to a post-glacial mountain lake: GSA Abstracts with Programs,

v.29, p.A-36.

F) Publications by collaborators with acknowledged contribution

(1) Stratton, L.E., Grant, G.E. in press. Autopsy of a reservoir: facies architecture in a

multi-dam system, Elwha River, Washington, USA. GSA Bulletin.

(2) Grant, G.G., Dietrich, W.E. 2017. The frontier beneath our feet. Water Resources

Research. 53. Doi:10.1002/2017WR020835.

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(3) Danner A, Safeeq M, Grant G, Wickham C, Tullos D, Santelmann M. 2017.

Scenario-based and scenario-neutral assessment of climate change impacts on

operational performance of a multipurpose reservoir. Journal of the American

Water Resources Association. 53(6):1467-1482 doi:10.1111/1752-1688.12589

(4) Grant GE, O'Connor JE, Safran E. 2017. Excursions in fluvial (dis)continuity.

Geomorphology. doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2016.08.033

(5) Safeeq M, Mauger GS, Grant GE, Arismendi I, Hamlet A, Lee S-Y. 2014.

Comparing Large-Scale Hydrological Model Predictions with Observed

Streamflow in the Pacific Northwest: Effects of Climate and Groundwater. Journal

of Hydrometeorology. P2501-2521. DOI: 10.1175/JHM-D-13-0198.1

(6) Grant G, Tague C N, Allen CD. 2013. Watering the forest for the trees: an

emerging priority for managing water in forest landscapes. Frontiers in Ecology

and Environment. doi:10.1890/120209

(7) Wigington, P.J., Jr, S.G. Leibowitz, R.L. Comeleo, and J.L. Ebersole. 2012.

Oregon hydrologic landscapes: a classification framework. Journal of the American

Water Resources Association 49:163-182.

(8) Grant, Gordon E. 2012. The Geomorphic Response of Gravel-Bed Rivers to

Dams: Perspectives and Prospects. Gravel Bed Rivers: Processes, Tools,

Environments. :165-181.

(9) Lancaster ST, Nolin AW, Copeland EA, Grant, Gordon E. 2012. Periglacial

debris-flow initiation and susceptibility and glacier recession from imagery,

airborne LiDAR, and ground-based mapping. Geosphere. 8.

(10) Leibowitz, S.G., P.J. Wigington, Jr, R.L. Comeleo, and J.L. Ebersole. 2011. A

temperature-precipitation based model of thirty-year mean snowpack accumulation

and melt in Oregon, USA. Hydrological Processes 26:741-759.

(11) Farley KA, Tague CL, Grant GE. 2011. Vulnerability of water supply from the

Oregon Cascades to changing climate: Linking science to users and policy. Global

Environmental Change. 21:110-122.

(12) Cashman KV, Deligne NI, Gannett MW, Grant GE, Jefferson A. 2009. Fire and

Water: Volcanology, geomorphology, and hydrogeology of the Cascade Range,

central Oregon. Volcanoes to Vineyards: Geologic Field Trips through the

Dynamic Landscape of the Pacific Northwest. :539-582.

(13) Tague, C. and Grant, G. 2009. Groundwater dynamics mediate low flow response

to global warming in snow-dominated alpine regions, Water Resources Research

vol.45, W07421, doi:10/1029/2008WR007179. 12p.

(14) Tague, C., Grant, G., Farrell, M., Choate, J., and Jefferson A. 2008. Deep

groundwater mediates streamflow response to climate warming in the Oregon

Cascades, Climatic Change 86: 189-210.

(15) Burkholder BK, Grant GE, Haggerty R, Wampler PJ, Khangaonkar T, 2008.

Influence of Hyporheic Flow and Geomorphology on Temperature of a Large,

Gravel-bed River, Clackamas River, Oregon, USA. Hydrological Processes

22(7):941-953. DOI: 10.1002/hyp.6984.

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(16) Jefferson, A., Grant, G., and Rose, T., 2006. Influence of volcanic history on

groundwater patterns on the west slope of the Oregon High Cascades, Water

Resources Research, Vol. 42, W12411, doi:10.1029/2005WR004812.

(17) M.J. Furniss, J. Guntle, eds. 2004. The geomorphic response of rivers to dams: an

electronic short course. Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-601. Portland, OR: U.S.

Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 2

CD-ROM.

(18) Tague, C. and Grant, G.E., 2004. A geological framework for interpreting the low

flow regimes of Cascade streams, Willamette River Basin, Oregon. Water

Resources Research, 40, W04303, doi:10.1029/2003WR002629.

(19) O'Connor J.E. and Grant G.E. 2003. A Peculiar River. Water Science and

Application 7. American Geophysical Union, Washington DC, 219p.

2. Presentations

A) Co-Authored Presentations

* denotes invited presentation

(1) Roques, C., Jachens, E., Rupp, D., Selker, J, Grant G., Lewis, S., Walter, C., Nolin,

A. November 22, 2017. On the origin of low flow regimes in alpine systems. Swiss

Geological Conference, Zurich, Switzerland.

(2) *Grant, G.E, and Lewis S.L., February 24, 2017. A Dam is not a Dam is not a

Dam: a framework for disentangling downstream effects of dams. NW

Hydropower Association, Portland, OR

(3) Grant, G., Lewis, S.L., Nolin, A., Selker, J., Hempel, L., Walter, C., Roques, C.,

Jefferson, A.J. November 16, 2016. No Snow, No Flow? New insights from a year

without snow in the Cascades Mts of Oregon, USA. NW Climate Conference,

Stevenson, WA.

(4) Flitcroft, R, Santelmann, M., Arismendi, I., Lewis, L. 2017. Linkages between

estuarine and freshwater habitats that promote life history diversity in coastal

salmonids. American Water Resources Association Meeting.

(5) *Grant, G.E., Major, J.J and Lewis, S.L. June 21, 2016. Hydrologic and

Geomorphic Perspectives Useful for Understanding the Spirit Lake/Toutle River

Issues. Presented to National Academy of Sciences, Board on Earth Sciences and

Resources: Long-term Management of the Spirit Lake/Toutle River System in

Southwest Washington, Kelso, WA.

(6) Grant, G.E., Hempel, L. and Lewis, S., June 22, 2016 Hydrologic control of

channel morphology and organization in gravel-bed streams: field studies and

flume experiments. Computational Methods in Water Resources, Toronto, Canada

(7) Lewis, S.L. May 3, 2016. Varves and the North American Varve Chronology,

Geomorphology Round Table, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR.

(8) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. April 2016 Wither Water? A heuristic meditation on the

future of hydrologic modeling. 1st Workshop on Improving the Theoretical

Underpinnings of Hydrologic Models, European Geophysical Union, Bertinoro,

Italy

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(9) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq M., Lewis, S., April 4, 2016. Flows of the future: Controls

and trends in streamflow in the McKenzie, Oregon, and western U.S. Eugene

Water and Electric Board, Eugene, OR.

(10) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. March 22, 2016. Wetting Our Appetites: The changing

landscape of water in the West. Northwest Scientific Association, Bend, OR.;

presentation also given April 7, 2016 to Oregon State University TRIAD Club,

Corvallis, OR

(11) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. February 8, 2016. The Future of Water in the West.

Corvallis Science Pub, Old World Deli, Corvallis, OR.

(12) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L., Esler, J. December 4, 2015. Dam Removal Stories: how

science helps us tell stories about dam removals and why it matters. RURALITIES

research group, University of Poitiers Humanities and Social Sciences Research

Center, Poitiers, France.

(13) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. November 9, 2015. The Ultimate Hydrologic Sponge:

how the plumbing system of the Cascades controls streamflow and response to

climate change in the Willamette Basin. City Club, Corvallis, OR.

(14) Nolin, A., Grant, G., Lewis, S., Roques, C., Roth, T., Selker, J., and Sproles, E.,

November 4, 2015. Seeing the Future? Hydrologic Impacts of a Record Warm

Winter and Dry Spring in the Oregon Cascades. 6th Annual Northwest Climate

Conference, Coeur D’Alene, ID.

(15) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. September 9, 2015. Linking sediment and channel

dynamics to hydrologic regimes below dams. European Union REFORM

Conference, Rome, Italy.

(16) Grant, G. Lewis, S., July 19, 2015., The Remains of the Dam: What have we

learned from 15 years of US dam removals, 3rd International Workshop on Wood in

Rivers, Padova, Italy.

(17) Grant, G. Lewis, S., Stewart, G. and Glasmann, J.R., July 19, 2015. Sediment

problems and consequences during temporary drawdown of a large flood control

reservoir for environmental retrofitting, 3rd International Workshop on Wood in

Rivers, Padova, Italy.

(18) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. July 18, 2015. A geomorphic perspective on river basin

management. Keynote Lecture 3rd International Workshop on Wood in Rivers,

Padova, Italy.

(19) *Grant, G.E. Lewis, S.L., Jefferson, A. April 20, 2015. From Volcanoes to River:

Co-evolution of hydrologic and geomorphic processes in a young volcanic arc.

Department of Civil Engineering, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN

(20) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq M., Lewis, S., April 4, 2015. Where’s water? Integrating

geology with hydrology to improve predictions of future streamflows in the

western U.S. School of the Environment Seminar Series, Portland State University,

Portland, OR.

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(21) *Grant, G.E. Lewis, S.L., Jefferson, A. March 26, 2015. From Volcanoes to River:

Co-evolution of hydrologic and geomorphic processes in a young volcanic arc.

Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO

(22) *Grant, G.E. and Lewis, S.L. March 25, 2015. The Critical Flow Hypothesis

Revisited – a 20 year retrospective. Borland Lecture on Hydraulics, Colorado State

University, Boulder, CO.

(23) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S. February 15, 2015.

Out, out damn spot! What have we learned from two decades of dam removals.

Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC.

(24) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S., Safeeq M., November 12, 2014. Drying Out: The future of

water in the west. Sip of Science public lecture series, sponsored by St Anthony

Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.

(25) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq M., Lewis, S., Tague, N., November 11, 2014. Where’s

water? Integrating geology with hydrology to improve predictions of future

streamflow in the western U.S. St Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of

Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.

(26) Grant, G.E. Lewis, S.L. September 18, 2014 The Remains of the Dam: What have

we learned from 15 yrs of dam removals? Presented at International Association of

Engineering Geologists XII Congress, Torino, Italy.

(27) Grant, G.E. Lewis, S.L. September 18, 2014 Sediment problems and consequences

during temporary drawdown of a large flood control reservoir for environmental

retrofitting. Presented at International Association of Engineering Geologists XII

Congress, Torino, Italy.

(28) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Lewis, S. June 16, 2014. The remains of the Day.

Powell Center, Fort Collins, Colorado.

(29) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. May 22, 2014. What’s so critical about the Critical Zone?

New insights from a growing network. Keynote Lecture at 1st CZO International

meeting, Beijing, China.

(30) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S. May 14, 2014. Out,

out damn spot! What have we learned from all the recent dam removals. Water

Resources Graduate Program Spring Seminar Series, Oregon State University,

Corvallis, OR.

(31) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq M., Lewis, S., Tague, N., May 5, 2014. Where will water

come from in the West? Integrating geology with hydrology to improve predictions

of future streamflow. Bureau of Land Management Soil and Resource Specialists,

Eugene, OR.

(32) *Grant, G.E. Lewis, S.L., Jefferson, A. April 11, 2014. From Volcanoes to River:

Co-evolution of hydrologic and geomorphic processes in a young volcanic arc. 5th

Annual Bretz Club, Sandy OR.

(33) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. March 31, 2014. What’s so critical about the Critical

Zone? New insights from a growing network. CUAHSI webinar.

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(34) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq M., Lewis, S., Tague, N., March 25, 2014. Where will water

come from in the West? Integrating geology with hydrology to improve predictions

of future streamflow. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tufts

University, Medford, MA.

(35) Nash, C.S., Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. February 2014. Response of stream/meadow

hydro-systems to Artificial Beaver Dams (ABDs), Silvies Valley, Oregon. River

Restoration Northwest, Skamania, WA.

(36) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C. Lewis, S., June 23, 2014. Out,

out dam spot! What have we learned from all the recent dam removals. Seminar on

dam removal, Aberdeen, Scotland.

(37) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S. November 20, 2013.

Out, out damn spot! What have we learned from all the recent dam removals.

Seminar to Environmental Studies Program, Lewis & Clark College, Portland, OR.

(38) Safeeq, M, Grant, G., Kramer, M., Staab, B., Lewis, S., November 4, 2013.

Mapping streamflow sensitivities to climate warming in the Pacific Northwest,

USA. AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference, Portland, OR.

(39) Safeeq, M, Grant, G., Lewis, S., Nolin, A., Hemple, L., Cooper, M., Tague C.

November 4, 2013. Assessment of climate change impact on peakflows in Oregon

Cascades: Implication for fluvial geomorphology and aquatic habitat. AWRA

Annual Water Resources Conference, Portland, OR.

(40) Safeeq, M., Grant, G., Lewis, S., Tague, N., Kramer, M., Staab, B. September 4,

2013. Spatial distribution of long-term hydrologic trends: Implications for regional

streamflow sensitivity to climate warming in the Pacific Northwest, USA. Pacific

Northwest Climate Science Conference Portland, OR.

(41) Hempel, L., Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. August 2013. Hydrology and channel

hydraulics in headwater streams of the central Oregon Cascades. Summer Institute

for Earth Surface Dynamics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.

(42) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L., O’Connor J., Jefferson A., April 16, 2013.Why is the

Deschutes So Peculiar? OSU Cascades Campus, Bend, OR.

(43) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq M., Lewis, S., Tague, N., Jefferson, A. November 6, 2012.

The ultimate hydrologic sponge: how geology and climate define Willamette River

streamflow, now and in the future. University of Oregon, Journalism Seminar,

Eugene, OR. controls streamflow response to climate change in the western

Cordillera

(44) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq M., Lewis, S., Tague, N., Jefferson, A. November 6, 2012.

It’s not just about the snow: how geology controls streamflow response to climate

change in the western Cordillera. Distinguished Lecturer in Hydrology, University

of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK.

(45) *Grant, G.E., Tague C.N., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., and Safeeq M., September 9,

2012. The Ultimate Hydrologic Sponge: how the plumbing system of the Cascades

controls streamflow and response to climate change in the Willamette Basin.

Central California Water Quality Monitoring Board, Redding, CA

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(46) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S., Wilcock, P. August

3, 2012. What have we learned from The Remains of the Day. National Center for

Earth Systems Dynamics, St. Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota,

Minneapolis, MN.

(47) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq, M., Lewis, Tague, N. May 2012. A geological framework for

interpreting effects of climate warming on streamflow in western U.S. watersheds:

what can the past tell us about the future? Northwatch Conference, Potsdam,

Germany.

(48) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A. and Lewis, S. May, 17, 2012. From Volcanoes to

Rivers: Co-evolution of hydrologic and geomorphic processes in a young volcanic

arc, University Lecture, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.

(49) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq, M., Lewis, Tague, N. April 5, 2012. Linking snowpack

dynamics and geology to explain past and forecast future streamflows Long-Term

Ecologic Research Station Meeting, HJ Andrews Experimental Watershed, Blue

River, OR.

(50) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq, M., Lewis, Tague, N. February 23, 2012. Flows of the

Future: Controls and trends in the McKenzie, Oregon and western US. Eugene

Water and Electric Board, Eugene, OR.

(51) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq, M., Lewis, Tague, N. February 23, 2012. Flows of the

Future: Geologic control on streamflow response to climate warming in the western

U.S. Winter Seminar Series, Geology & Geophysics, CEOAS Oregon State

University, Corvallis, OR.

(52) *Grant, G.E., Tague C.N., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., and Safeeq M., October 2011.

The Ultimate Hydrologic Sponge: how the plumbing system of the Cascades

controls streamflow and response to climate change in the Willamette Basin.

Pacific Northwest Climate Conference, Seattle, WA

(53) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S., Wilcock, P.

September 16, 2011. The Very Hungry River: spectacular geomorphic response of

the Sandy River to removal of Marmot Dam. River, Coastal and Estuarine

Morphodynamics Symposium, Beijing China.

(54) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq, M., Lewis, Tague, N. September 2, 2011. Coupling

groundwater and snowpack dynamics to predict future streamflow regimes in the

Pacific Northwest. Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board, Salem, OR.

(55) *Grant, G.E., Selker, and Lewis, S.L. June 16, 2011, Will restoring wet meadows

solve California’s water problems? A curmudgeon’s parable. Sierra Meadows

Symposium, CA

(56) Grant, G.E., Safeeq, M., Lewis, S., Tague C.N., May 24, 2011. Where’s Water?

Forecasting future streamflow regimes in the Pacific Northwest. The Oregon Water

Conference, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR

(57) Safeeq, M., Grant, G.E., Lewis, S., Tague C.N., May 24, 2011. Sensitivity of

Oregon’s watersheds to streamflow changes due to climate warming: a

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geohydrological approach. The Oregon Water Conference, Oregon State

University, Corvallis, OR

(58) *Grant, G.E., Safeeq M., May 12, 2011. Where’s Water? Forecasting future

streamflow regimes in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle Climate Symposium, Seattle

WA.

(59) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S., Wilcock, P. March

9, 2011. The Very Hungry River: spectacular geomorphic response of the Sandy

River to removal of Marmot Dam. Bureau of Reclamation Training Center,

Denver, CO

(60) *Grant, G.E., Selker, and Lewis, S.L. March 9, 2011, Will restoring wet meadows

solve California’s water problems? A curmudgeon’s parable. Bureau of

Reclamation Training Center, Denver CO

(61) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S. March 9, 2011. Geology is

destiny: plumbing the hydrology of the Cascades and predicting the future of water

in the West. Bureau of Reclamation Training Center, Denver, CO

(62) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S., Wilcock, P. March

8, 2011. Marmot: The Remains of the Day. Salmon Restoration Federation,

University of California Davis, Davis, CA.

(63) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A. and Lewis, S. February 25, 2011. From Volcanoes to

Rivers: Co-evolution of hydrologic and geomorphic processes in a young volcanic

arc, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.

(64) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S., Wilcock, P.

February 10, 2011. The Very Hungry River: spectacular geomorphic response of

the Sandy River to removal of Marmot Dam. Departmental of Civil Engineering

Seminar, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.

(65) *Grant, G., Nolin, A., Copeland, E., Kennard, P., February 2, 2011. From

atmospheric rivers to rivers of debris. Department of Geography and

Environmental Engineering Seminar, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.

(66) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C.N., Lewis, S.L. January 19, 2011. Water Resources:

Influences of Climate in the West Central Cascades of Oregon. Invited seminar to

Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board, Salem OR.

(67) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C.N., Lewis, S.L., Safeeq, M. January 19, 2011. Streamflow

Response to Climate Warming in Oregon. Invited seminar to by Oregon Watershed

Enhancement Board, Salem OR.

(68) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A. and Lewis, S. December 12, 2010. From Volcanoes to

Rivers: Co-evolution of hydrologic and geomorphic processes in a young volcanic

arc, Catchment Symposium, Berkeley, CA.

(69) *Grant, G.E., Tague C.N., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., and Nolin, A. October, 12,

2010. The Ultimate Hydrologic Sponge: how the plumbing system of the Cascades

controls streamflow and response to climate change in the Willamette Basin.

“Within Our Reach” Myers Foundation forum on the Willamette River, Oregon

State University, Corvallis, OR.

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(70) Grant, G.E., Tague C.N., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., and Nolin, A. October, 12, 2010.

Oregon’s Water – Now and in the future. Water and Urban Environment class

University of Oregon, Eugene, OR.

(71) Grant, G.E., Tague, C.N., Lewis, S. June 9, 2010. Streamflow response to climate

warming in mountain regions: Integrating the effects of snowpack and groundwater

dynamics. MTN CLIM conference, H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Blue River,

OR.

(72) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Major, J., Podolack, C., Lewis, S., Wilcock, P. April,

22, 2010. The Very Hungry River: spectacular geomorphic response of the Sandy

River to removal of Marmot Dam. Western Chapter, American Fisheries Society

Meeting, Salt Lake City, UT

(73) *Grant, G.E., Selker, and Lewis, S.L. March 26, 2010. Will restoring wet meadows

solve California’s water problems? A curmudgeon’s parable. Burgess Lecture,

University of Washington, Seattle WA.

(74) Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Lewis, S. February 18, 2010. A geo-hydrologic

framework for interpreting and predicting the geomorphic response of rivers to

dams. U.S. Geological Survey, Portland, OR.

(75) Grant, G.E.*, O’Connor, J.E., Major, J.J., Wallick, J.R, Burkholder, B.K., Lewis,

S.L. Oct 13, 2008. The very hungry river: spectacular geomorphic response of the

Sandy River to removal of Marmot Dam with implications for removal of other

dams, 4th National Conferece on Coastal and Estuarine Habitat Restoration,

Providence, RI

(76) Grant, G.*, Nolin, A., Lewis, S., July 3, 2008. New insights into the hydrologic

and geomorphic impacts of climate warming on the western United States, invited

seminar, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

(77) *Gordon, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Nolin, A., Lewis, S. June 11, 2008. Water

and Climate Issues for Forest Lands: Where will the West’s Water Come From?

Forest Service R5/R6 Scientists Meeting, Medford, Oregon.

(78) *Grant G., Marr, J., Hill, C., Johnson, S., Campbell, K., Nohseni, O., Wallick, J.R.,

Lewis, S.L., O’Connor, J.E., Major, J.J., Burkholder, B.K. May 16, 2008.

Experimental and field observations of breach dynamics accompanying erosion of

Marmot cofferdam, Sandy River, OR. World Environmental and Water Resources

Conference, ASCE Honolulu, Hawaii

(79) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J.E., Major, J.J., Wallick, J.R, Burkholder, B.K., Lewis,

S.L. May 9, 2008. The Very Hungry River: Spectacular Geomorphic Response of

the Sandy River to Removal of Marmot Dam. Oregon Chapter of American

Fisheries Society Stream Restoration Workshop, Portland, Oregon.

(80) *Grant, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S. May 6, 2008. Geological framework

for interpreting streamflow and temperature regimes under climate warming.

American Fisheries Society Western Division Annual Meeting, Portland, Oregon.

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(81) *Grant, G.E., Burkholder, B., Haggerty, R., Lewis, S. March 8, 2008. Can gravel

augmentation below dams mitigate thermal effects of reservoirs? 26th Annual

Salmonid Restoration Conference, Lodi, California.

(82) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J.E., Major, J., Wallick, J.R., Burkholder, B., Lewis, S.

March 7, 2008. The Very Hungry River: Spectacular Geomorphic Response of the

Sandy River to Removal of Marmot Dam. 26th Annual Salmonid Restoration

Conference, Lodi, California.

(83) *Grant, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Nolin, A., Lewis, S. January 25, 2008. Water

and Climate Issues for Forest Lands: Where will the West’s Water Come From?

USFS Seminar, Washington DC

(84) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Nolin, A. October 18, 2007.

Geologically Mediated Response of Streamflow to Climate Warming in the

Western U.S. OSU Geology Seminar, Corvallis, Oregon.

(85) Grant, G., Jefferson, A., O'Connor, J., Lewis, S. June 24-30, 2007. Drainage

density integrates geology and climate, reflects landscape evolution, and constrains

paleoflood magnitudes. 4th International Paleoflood Workshop, Crete, Greece.

(86) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Lewis, S. Jefferson, A. March 5, 2007.

Geologic controls on stream temperature regimes and implications for climate

warming. OSU Stream Team Seminar, Corvallis, Oregon.

(87) *Grant, G. Stewart, G., Bromley, C., Lewis, S. March 1, 2007. The geomorphic

response of rivers to dam removal: Implications for Marmot Dam removal on the

Sandy River, OR. USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, Washington.

(88) *Grant, G., Jefferson, A., Tague, C., Lewis, S., February 8, 2007. Climate Change

and Willamette Hydrology. Department of Geography Winter Seminar Series,

University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.

(89) Grant, G., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S. October 16, 2006. Is Geology Destiny? A

geologic framework for predicting streamflows in ungaged catchments. USA Pub

(Prediction in Ungaged Basins) Workshop, Corvallis, Oregon.

(90) Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. October 11, 2006. Effects of forest deforestation on

floods: myth or reality? China Conference

(91) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S.L. October 10, 2006. Fluvial Dissection of

Volcanic Terranes in the U.S. Pacific Northwest: Implications for Hydrology and

Climate Change. China Conference

(92) Jefferson, A., Nolin, A., Lewis, S., Payne, M., Grant, G. June 7-9, 2006. Climate

variability, snowmelt distribution, and effects on streamflow in a Cascades

watershed. 63rd Annual Eastern Snow Conference. Newark, Delaware.

(93) *Grant, G., Lewis, S., Cissel, J., Swanson, F., McDonnell, J. June 15, 2006. Does

forest management increase geomorphically significant peak streamflows? Bureau

of Land Management State of Science Workshop. Corvallis Oregon.

(94) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C. May 22, 2006. Geologically-

mediated groundwater storage controls streamflow response to changing climate in

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the McKenzie River Watershed. Presentation to Eugene Water & Electric Board,

Eugene Oregon.

(95) *Grant, G.E., Bromley, C., Stewart, G., Lewis, S., April 11, 2006. Out, out dam

spot!: The geomorphic response of rivers to dam removal. Department of

Geosciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon.

(96) *Grant, G., Lewis, S., Swanson, F., McDonnell, J., Cissel, J. March 20, 2006.

Effects of forest practices on peak flows and consequent channel response in

western Oregon: a state-of-science report. Bureau of Land Management State-of

Science Peak Flow Scientists Meeting Corvallis Oregon.

(97) *Grant, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S. February 27, 2006. A brief overview

of the hydrology of the Willamette River system (with emphasis on the Coast and

Middle Forks). Middle Fork Willamette Forest Service.

(98) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. December 13, 2005. How will peakflows affect forest

harvest in my watershed? Bureau of Land Management State-of Science Peak Flow

Managers Meeting, Corvallis Oregon.

(99) *Grant, G.E., Lewis, S.L. November 7, 2005. The Role of Forest Harvest on

Floods: Myth or Reality? Stream Team Seminar, Corvallis, Oregon.

(100) Grant, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S. November 2, 2005. Geologically-

mediated groundwater storage as a first-order control on streamflow response to

changing climate in volcanic landscapes. Cooperative State Research Education

and Extension Service Conference, Groundwater under the Pacific Northwest,

Stevenson, Washington.

(101) *Grant, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S. October, 24, 2005. Smoldering

volcanoes, secret springs, and the ultimate hydrologic sponge: Geohydrology of an

active volcanic landscape. Department of Earth Sciences, Dartmouth College,

Hanover, New Hampshire.

(102) *Grant, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S. October 10, 2005. Rivers of the

Future: Effects of climate change on the hydrology of the Pacific Northwest. Rivers

& Climate Group.

(103) *Grant, G., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C. September 12, 2005. A subterranean

Lake Geneva? Volcanic landscapes as the ultimate hydrologic sponge. Zurich,

Switzerland

(104) Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J., Wampler, P., Lancaster, S., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S.,

Sept 5-9, 2005, Ronnenberg, K., Geologic controls on the abundance of gravel in

rivers. Gravel Bed Rivers VI, Lienz, Austria.

(105) *Grant, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., March 17, 2005 A River Runs

Underneath It: Geological Control of Hydrogeomorphic Regimes in the Oregon

Cascades and Implications for Climate Change. Presentation to Eugene Water and

Electric Board, Eugene, Oregon.

(106) *Grant, G., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., February 4, 2005. A River Runs

Underneath It: Geological Control of Hydrogeomorphic Regimes in the Oregon

Cascades and Implications for Climate Change. Illinios.

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(107) Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., O’Connor, J.E., Haluska, T., Tague, C.,

November 19, 2004. Drainage network evolution in volcanic landscapes: How

much time does it take to get the river flowing? Oregon State University

Geomorphology Brown Bag.

(108) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J.E., Lewis, S.L. October 21, 2004. A Geo-hydrologic

Framework for Interpreting and Predicting the Geomorphic Response of Rivers to

Dams. USFS Conference for Physical Scientists: Advancing the Fundamental

Sciences. San Diego, California

(109) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C., Farrell, M. October 12, 2004.

Geologic and topographic controls on streamflow response to climate change in the

Western U.S. PNW Climate Impacts Group Fall Seminar Series, Seattle,

Washington.

(110) *Jefferson A., Grant, G., Lewis, S. Tague, C., Farrell, M. August 5, 2004.

Understanding the source of water in Cascades rivers and planning for climate

change. Oregon Water Resources Department Commissioners' Meeting, Eugene

Oregon.

(111) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C., Farrell, M. June 2004.A

Geologic Framework for Interpreting Springs and Hydrologic Regimes in the

Cascades. CUAHSI Vision Workshop.

(112) Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C., Farrell, M. June, 2004. A

Geologic Framework for Interpreting Springs and Hydrologic Regimes in the

Cascades. Spring Fling Conference, Corvallis, Oregon.

(113) Grant, G.E., Bromley, C., Stewart, G., Lewis, S. May, 28, 2004. Dam Removal:

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. Oregon State University Geomorphology

Brown Bag Corvallis, Oregon.

(114) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C., Farrell, M., April 2, 2004 Cold

Waters Run Deep: How the Underlying Hydrology and Geology of the High

Cascades affects Summer Streamflow. Santiam Fish & Game Annual Meeting,

Lebanon, Oregon.

(115) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. March 17, 2004.

Hydrogeologic controls on stream temperatures and fine sediment transport in

headwater catchments. Oregon Headwaters Research Cooperative

(116) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C., Farrell, M., March 11, 2004. The

science and secrets of Cascadian Rivers. Science Connections sponsored by Oregon

State University and Portland Public Schools, Portland, Oregon.

(117) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Mellick, J., Tague, C., Farrell, M., March 1,

2004. Geologic Controls on the Hydrologic, Sediment, and Temperature Regimes

of the McKenzie River, OSU Stream Team Seminar, Corvallis, Oregon.

(118) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Tague, C., Farrell, M., January 21, 2004

Cold Waters Run Deep: How the Underlying Hydrology and Geology of the High

Cascades affects Summer Streamflow. South Santiam Watershed Council, Salem,

Oregon.

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(119) *Grant, G.E., Jefferson, A., Lewis, S., Mellick, J., Tague, C. Farrell, M. December

18, 2003. Geologic Controls on the hydrologic, sediment and temperature regimes

of the McKenzie River. Presentation to Eugene Water and Electric Board, Eugene

Oregon.

(120) *Grant, G.E., Bromley, C., Stewart, G., Lewis, S., Kast, P. October 15, 2003. Out,

out dam spot! Emerging science and policy issues for dam removal. Department of

Earth Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire.

(121) *Grant, G.E., Bromley, C., Stewart, G., Lewis, S., Kast, P. October 7, 2003. Out,

out dam spot! Emerging science and policy issues for dam removal. US Geological

Survey Research Symposium, Portland, Oregon

(122) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. July 18,

2003. Geologic Controls on the Hydrologic and Temperature Regimes of the

McKenzie River. National Council for Air and Stream Improvement watershed task

group, HJ Andrews Experimental Forest, Blue River, Oregon.

(123) *Grant, G.E., Stewart, G., Lewis, S., Glasmann, J.R., Ninneman, J., July 10, 2003.

Just how muddy was the river? Cougar Reservoir drawdown. US Forest Service

Regional Hydropower Assessment Team, McKenzie Bridge, Oregon.

(124) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. June 18,

2003. Where does the water come from? New insights into the sources of the

Willamette River. Middle Fork Willamette Watershed Council. Lowell, Oregon.

(125) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. June 18,

2003. Where does the water come from? New insights into the sources of

Cascadian Rivers. Klamath Watershed Coucil, Arcata, California.

(126) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. June 12,

2003. Geologic Controls on the Hydrologic and Temperature Regimes of the

McKenzie River. McKenzie Watershed Council, Eugene, Oregon.

(127) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. June 6,

2003. Geologic Controls on the Hydrologic and Temperature Regimes of Western

Oregon Rivers. HJ Andrews Long-Term Ecological Research Science Hour.

Corvallis, Oregon.

(128) *Grant, G.E. and Lewis, S.L., May 28, 2003. Effects of changing flow regime on

channel morphology, sediment transport, and grain size: rethinking what we know.

Instream Flow Workshop, Seattle, Washington.

(129) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. May 1,

2003. Where does the water in the Willamette River come from? (and why should

we care?) Forest Service Region 6 Fish and Water Program meeting. Eugene,

Oregon.

(130) *Grant, G.E., Stewart, G., Bromley, C., Lewis, S. March 12, 2003. The geomorphic

effects of dams on rivers. USDA Forest Service Dams & Geomorphology

Workshop, Reno, Nevada.

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(131) *Grant, G.E. Lewis, S.L. March 11, 2003. The spatial and geographic context of

dams on western Forest Service lands. USDA Forest Service Dams &

Geomorphology Workshop, Reno, Nevada.

(132) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. January

29, 2003. Where does the water in the Willamette River come from? (and why

should we care?) Willamette Forest Leadership Team, Lowell, Oregon.

(133) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. January

21, 2003. Where does the water in the Willamette River come from? Riverwatch

Forum, Corvallis, Oregon.

(134) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A. January

16, 2003. Geologic controls on flow, temperature, and sediment regimes McKenzie

River, Oregon Headwater Stream Ecology Research Forum, sponsored by the

Oregon Headwaters Research Cooperative

(135) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A.

November 14, 2002. Geologic Control of the Flow and Temperature Regimes of

the McKenzie River, Oregon. Presentation to Eugene Water & Electric Board,

Eugene, Oregon.

(136) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Manga, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A.

November 12, 2002. Geologic Control of the Peak and Low Flow Regimes of the

Willamette River and Tributaries, Oregon. US Geological Survey Water Resources

Division Seminar Series, Portland, Oregon.

(137) Grant, G.E., Hayes, S.K., and Lewis, S., Feb. 19, 2002, Disentangling the effects of

peak flow and sediment production increases due to timber harvest. Symposium on

Small Channel and their Riparian Zones, Forestry Continuing Studies Network of

British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C.

B) Presentations Developed for Collaborators

* denotes invited presentation –

(1) *Grant, G.E. May 31, 2017. The geomorphic and social dimensions of river

continuity: some perspectives from abroad. AMBER Ecological Continuity

Conference, Beaune, France.

(2) *Grant, G.E. December 11, 2016. Wither Western Water? Coupling subsurface and

snowpack dynamics to forecast the future of water in the western U.S. Keynote

Lecture, Berkeley Catchment Symposium, Berkeley CA.

(3) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J.E., Safran, E. 2016. Excursions in fluvial (dis)

continuity. Keynote at Binghamton Symposium, Fort Collins, Colorado, 16-18 Sep.

(4) *Grant, G.E. October 5, 2015. Emerging Challenges in Hydrological Sciences: An

amuse-bouche. Keynote lecture at INSPIRE, Boulder, CO.

(5) *Grant, G.E. 2015. Some historical context useful for understanding Eastern

Oregon stream systems. Testimony to the Oregon State Senate May, 18, 2015.

Salem, OR.

(6) *Grant, G.G. October 5, 2014. Grant Challenges in Surface Earth Processes for the

Coming Decade: An amuse bouche. Keynote lecture to Workshop on Research

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Infrastructure in Support of NSF Surface Earth Processes Grand Challenges.

Chicago, IL.

(7) *Grant, G.E. September 18, 2014. A geomorphic perspective on river basin

management. Presented at International Association of Engineering Geologists XII

Congress, Torino, Italy.

(8) *Grant, G.E. May 14, 2014. Out, out damn spot! What have we learned from all the

recent dam removals. Keynote USGS Powell Center, Fort Collins, CO.

(9) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C. & Allen, C.D., May 14, 2014. Watering the Forest for the

Trees: An emerging priority for managing water in forested landscapes. Bureau of

Land Management, OR.

(10) *Grant, G.E. 2013. What’s so Critical about the Critical Zone? Abstract H31M-01

presented at 2013 Fall Meeting, AGU, San Francisco, 9-13 Dec.

(11) *Grant, G.E., October 10, 2013. Distinguishing “big” vs “little” numbers for river

management on the Willamette River, Oregon. Nichols School of the Environment

symposium on river basin management, Duke University, Durham, NC

(12) Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J.E., Wolman, M.G. August, 28, 2013. A river runs through

it: Conceptual Models in Fluvial Geomorphology. 8th International Conference on

Geomorphology, International Association of Geomorphologists, Paris, France

(13) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C. & Allen, C.D., June 28, 2013. Watering the Forest for the

Trees: An emerging priority for managing water in forested landscapes. AWRA

Healthy Forests Healthy Waters Summer Specialty Conference, Hartford, CT.

(14) Grant, G.E., Tague, C.N., Allen, C. May 2013. Watering the Forest for the Trees:

An Emerging Priority for Managing Water in Forested Landscapes. International

meeting on ecohydrology, Be’er Sheva, Israel.

(15) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C.N., Allen, C. May 2, 2013. Watering the Forest for the

Trees: An Emerging Priority for Managing Water in Forested Landscapes.

Department of Civil Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.

(16) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C. & Allen, C.D., April 23, 2013. Watering the Forest for the

Trees: An emerging priority for managing water in forested landscapes. Climate

Change Seminar, Oregon Climate Change Research Institute, Oregon State

University, Corvallis, OR.

(17) *Grant, G.E. April 20, 2013. Then and now: history of DOGEE. Johns Hopkins

University, Baltimore, MD.

(18) *Grant, G.E. January 29, 2013. The Critical Zone. Keynote at Joint NSF-

EarthCube-GeoDomain and USGS-Powell-Synthesis Center Workshop, Fort

Collins, CO.

(19) Grant, G.E., Safeeq, M., Staab, B., Kramer, M. A geoclimatic Framework for

Characterizing Summer Streamflow Vulnerability to Climate Warming in the

Pacific Northwest, USA. Abstract H33O-06 presented at 2012 Fall Meeting, AGU,

San Francisco, 3-7 Dec.

(20) *Grant, G.E., O’Connor, J.E., and Major, J.J., 2012, The Remains of the Dams:

What have we learned from 10 yrs of dam removals? Abstract EP54C-08 presented

at 2012 Fall Meeting, AGU, San Francisco, 3-7 Dec.

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(21) Grant, G.E. September 2012. A Chinese Banquet of US Geomorphic Science

relevant to river restoration, Beijing Normal University Beijing China

(22) *Grant, G. September 2012, Achieving Criticality: Challenges and Prospects for

the US CZO Network. Presented at the 2nd International Geobiology Conference,

Wuhan China.

(23) *Grant, G. July 16, 2012. Achieving Criticality: Challenges and prospects for the

CZO Network. Keynote at CUAHSI Biennial Meeting, Boulder, CO.

(24) *Grant, G. April 26, 2012. What do we know about the response of rivers to dams?

Bren School, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA.

(25) Grant, G.E., Tague, C. & Allen, C.D., 2011, Watering the Forest for the Trees: An

emerging priority for managing water in forested landscapes. Abstract GC34A-09

presented at 2011 Fall Meeting, AGU, San Francisco, Calif., 5-9 Dec.

(26) Cashman, K.V. and Grant, G.E. 2011, Coherent Flow Structures in Basaltic Lava

Flows – Flow Dynamics and Rheology, Abstract EP31C-0833 presented at 2011

Fall Meeting, AGU, San Francisco, Calif., 5-9 Dec.

(27) Grant, G.E, and Cashman, K.V. August 3, 2011, Are there coherent flow structures

in lava flows? Presented at Coherent Flow Structures in Geophysical Flows at

Earth’s Surface, Burnaby, British Columbia.

(28) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C. & Allen, C.D., November 16, 2011, Watering the Forest

for the Trees: An emerging priority for managing water in forested landscapes. HJ

Andrews Experimental Forest, Blue River, OR.

(29) Grant, G.E. March 8, 2011. The Geomorphic Response of Rivers to Dams:

Certainties and Surprises, Powell Center, Fort Collins, CO.

(30) *Grant, G.E., Nov 12, 2010. What do we know about the response of rivers to

dams? Minnesota Dam conference, University of Minnesota /St. Anthony’s Fall

Laboratory, Minneapolis, MN.

(31) *Grant, G.E., Nov 10, 2010. Out, out, damn’d dam! Freeing wild rivers. Research

at the Red Stag Supperclub, Minneapolis, MN.

(32) Grant, G.E., September 1, 2010. The Geomorphic Response of Gravel-Bed Rivers

to Dams: Perspectives and Prospects. Presented at Gravel Bed Rivers VII,

Tadoussac, Quebec.

(33) Grant, G.E., Safran, E., O’Connor, J.E., House, P.K., Cashman, K.V., Ely, L.L.

Nov 2, 2010. Can’t Get Over It: Causes and consequences of geological

discontinuities in rivers. GSA Abstract with Programs, Vol. 42, No. 5, p. 519.

(34) *Grant, G., Nolin, A., Copeland, E., Ellinger, J., Parker, L., Lancaster, S., Kennard,

P., Delaney, I., Tainer, E., September 28, 2010. From atmospheric rivers to rivers

of debris. Global Change and Hydrology Meeting, Perth, Scotland.

(35) *Grant, G.E. July 20, 2010. “Is it a big number or a little number?” Inaugural M.

Gordon Wolman Lecture, CUAHSI Biennial Meeting, Boulder, CO.

(36) Grant, G., Nolin, A., Copeland, E., Parker, L., Kennard, P., Delaney, I., June 7,

2010. From atmospheric rivers to rivers of debris: will climate warming increase

the risk of debris flows from Cascade volcanoes? MTN CLIM conference, H.J.

Andrews Experimental Forest, Blue River, OR.

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(37) *Grant, G.E. May 18, 2010. Effects of dam removal on rivers. National River

Management Symposium, Portland, OR.

(38) *Grant, G.E. February 16, 2010. Dams, Sediment and channel change…and why

you should care. Invited presentation to NW Hydropower Association, Portland,

Oregon.

(39) *Grant, G., Nolin, A., Copeland, E., Ellinger, J., Parker, L., Lancaster, S., Kennard,

P., Delaney, I., Tainer, E., January 13, 2010. From atmospheric rivers to rivers of

debris. Portland State University, Portland, OR.

(40) *Grant, G.E. and Selker, J.S. 2009, Will restoring wet meadows increase stream

flow?, EOS Trans. AGU 90 (52), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract H51M-01.

(41) *Grant, G., Nolin, A., Copeland, E., Ellinger, J., Parker, L., Lancaster, S., Kennard,

P., Delaney, I., Tainer, E., October 18, 2009, From atmospheric rivers to rivers of

debris: coupling extreme precipitation events, glacial retreat, debris flows and

channel changes on Mount Rainier, Washington. GSA Abstracts with Programs,

Vol. 41, No. 7, p. 40.

(42) Grant, G., Tague, C. October 18, 2009, Hydrologic response of young volcanic

terranes to climate warning: perspectives and paradoxes. GSA Abstracts with

Programs, Vol. 41, No. 7, p. 176.

(43) Grant, G.E., Sept. 25, 2009, The Ultimate Hydrologic Sponge: how the plumbing

system of a young volcanic arc controls streamflow, geomorphic evolution, and

response to climate change in the Oregon Cascades. Department of Geology,

University of Idaho, Moscow, ID.

(44) *Grant, G.E., Effects of climate warming on water resources in Oregon. OSU

Institute for Natural Resources Workshop, Corvallis, OR, April 16, 2009

(45) *Grant, G.E., “The Very Hungry River: Effects of removal of Marmot Dam”, U.S.

Fish and Wildlife Service Spotlight on Science, April 16, 2009, Portland, OR

(46) *Grant, G.E., A conceptual framework for predicting the geomorphic response of

rivers to dams, Invited talk, European Geophysical Union, Vienna, Austria, April

23, 2009

(47) Grant, G.E. and Cashman, K., A conceptual framework for interpreting lava

flow/river interactions, International Association of Geomorphologists, July 10,

2009, Melbourne, Australia

(48) *Grant, G.E., The Ultimate Hydrologic Sponge: how the plumbing system of a

young volcanic arc controls streamflow, geomorphic evolution, and response to

climate change in the Oregon Cascades. Dept. of Geology, University of Idaho,

Sept. 25, 2009

(49) Grant, G E, Major, J J O'Connor, J Wallick, J R Marr, J Wilcock, P Podolack, C.

December 2008. The Scientific and Institutional Context for the Removal of

Marmot Dam, Sandy River, Oregon. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting,

San Francisco, CA. Published as Eos Trans. AGU 89 (53), Fall Meeting Suppl.,

Abstract H41I-04

(50) *Grant, G.E., Nov. 13, 2008. Climate change impacts on hydrology in the West –

what you need to know. 2nd Northwest Natural Resources Forum of executives of

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all federal agencies in the Northwest: USFS, USGS, USFWS, ACOE, EPA, NPS.,

Astoria, OR

(51) *Grant, G.E., Nov. 4, 2008. Of rivers, wine, and song: some interesting problems

in fluvial geomorphology, Departmental seminar, Dept. of Geography, Oregon

State University

(52) *Grant, G.E., Oct., 13, 2008. The Very Hungry River. 4th National Restore

America’s Estuaries Conference, Providence, RI.

(53) *Grant, G.E., Oct 23, 2008. The role of science in river restoration: an

international perspective. Keynote Presentation 1st International River Restoration

Conference, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China.

(54) Grant, G., Cashman, K. August 17, 2008. A framework for understanding lava-

river interactions during and after emplacement. International Association of

Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior General Assembly, Reykjavik,

Iceland.

(55) *Grant, G.E. July 17, 2008. Dramatic geomorphic response of a gravel-bed river to

dam removal. Hydrovision 2008, Sacramento California

(56) *Grant, G.E. June 23, 2008. Dramatic geomorphic response of a gravel-bed river to

dam removal. Padova, Italy

(57) *Grant, G. June 23, 2008. Direction and Consequences of Climate Change in the

Northwestern United States. Padova, Italy

(58) *Grant, G.E., June 18, 2008. New Science and management challenges in river

restoration: dam removal, gravel augmentation, and climate change. 4th ECRR

International Conference on River Restoration, Venice, Italy (keynote); similar talk

(invited) given on June 23, 2008 in Padova Italy.

(59) *Grant, G.E. June 16, 2008. Dramatic geomorphic response of a gravel-bed river to

dam removal. 4th ECRR International Conference on River Restoration, Venice,

Italy

(60) *Grant, G.E., June 3, 2008 The Very Hungry River: Spectacular Geomorphic

Response of the Sandy River to Removal of Marmot Dam. UC-Santa Barbara Bren

School of Environmental Science and Management Seminar Series

(61) *Grant, G.E., May 14, 2008. The Very Hungry River: Spectacular Geomorphic

Response of the Sandy River to Removal of Marmot Dam. World Environmental

and Water Resources Conference, ASCE Honolulu, Hawaii

(62) *Grant, G. February 5, 2008. The Very Hungry River: Lessons from the

spectacular geomorphic response of the Sandy River to removal of Marmot Dam.

River Restoration Northwest, Stevenson, Washington. (keynote); similar talk

(invited) given on February 4, 2008 to OSU Stream Team Seminar. Corvallis,

Oregon.

(63) *Grant, G., Tague, C. January 28, 2008. Past, Present, and (near-term) Future of

McKenzie River Hydrologic Studies and Modeling. Eugene Water and Electric

Board, Eugene Oregon.

(64) *Grant, G., Cashman, K., O'Connor, J., December 13, 2007. Of Magic Carpets,

Rolling Snowballs, and Sleeping Dragons: an Energetics-based Classification for

Hillslope/channel Interactions. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San

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Francisco, CA. Published as Eos Trans. AGU 88 (52), Fall Meeting Suppl.,

Abstract H43H-01

(65) Grant, G.E., Cashman, K.V. October 29, 2007. Fire and Water: Interactions

between lava flows and rivers during eruptive events. Geological Society of

America Annual Meeting, Denver, CO. Published as GSA Abstracts with Programs

39(6): 180.

(66) *Grant, G.E. October 9, 2007. EWEB Major Customer Reception, Panelist on

Climate Change, Eugene, Oregon.

(67) *Grant, G. May, 19, 2007. Fluvial geomorphology and river restoration: some

deliciously – wicked problems. River Rally 2007. Stevenson, Washington

(68) *Grant, G.E., Bromley, C., Stewart, G. Out, out dam spot! February 28, 2007. The

geomorphic response of rivers to dam removal. OSU Water Resources Graduate

Program Open House, Corvallis, Oregon.

(69) *Grant, G., Burkholder, B., Jefferson, A. February 19, 2007. Can gravel

augmentation below dams mitigate thermal effects of reservoirs? Some initial

results from field and laboratory studies. 6th International Symposium of

Ecohydraulics, Christchurch, New Zealand.

(70) Burkholder, B.K., Grant, G.E., Haggerty, R., Wampler, P., Khangaonkar, T.P.

December 14, 2006. Potential for Gravel Augmentation to Reduce Water

Temperatures in a Gravel-Bed River, American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting,

San Francisco, CA. Published as Eos Trans. AGU 87 (52), Fall Meeting Suppl.,

Abstract H41C-0422. (poster)

(71) *Grant, G.E. September 29, 2006. Some righteous (and not-so-righteous)

approaches to the wicked problem of river restoration. Missouri Restoration

Conference (keynote)

(72) *Grant, G.E., Bromley, C., Stewart, G., April 5, 2006. New insights into the

geomorphic response of rivers to dam removal from field and laboratory studies.

US Geological Survey Florida Integrated Science Center, Gainesville, Florida

(73) Grant, G., March 22, 2006. Forests, Forest Management, and Hydrology: Past,

Present and Future. NAS/NRC Washington, DC.

(74) *Grant, G.E. March 2006. Emerging international issues in watershed science and

management: Opportunities for USFS International Programs. Washington, DC.

(75) *Grant, G.E., Bromley, C., Stewart, G., February 24, 2006. Will deconstructing

dams "restore" rivers? The geomorphic response of rivers to dam removal. Santa

Barbara, California

(76) Tague, C.L., Farrell, M., Grant, G., Jefferson, A. December 8, 2005. Characterizing

Regional Spatial Variation in Summer Streamflow Response to Climate Warming

in the Mountains of the Western US American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting,

San Francisco, CA. Published as Eos Trans. AGU 86 (52), Fall Meeting Suppl.,

Abstract H52B-03. (poster)

(77) Lancaster, S.T., Grant, G.E., December 9, 2005. Coalescing Debris-Fill Complexes

in Headwater Valleys of the Oregon Coast Range American Geophysical Union

Fall Meeting, San Francisco, CA. Published as Eos Trans. AGU 86 (52), Fall

Meeting Suppl., Abstract H51H-01.

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(78) Jefferson, A., Grant, G.E. December 8, 2005. Drainage Network Development on a

Porous Landscape American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, CA.

Published as Eos Trans. AGU 86 (52), Fall Meeting Suppl., Abstract H42B-07.

(poster)

(79) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Farrell, M., Jefferson, A. November 17, 2005. Hydrologic

and Temperature Response of Cascade Headwater Streams to Projected Climate

Change. Headwater Streams Symposium, sponsored by the Oregon Headwaters

Research Cooperative. Corvallis, Oregon.

(80) Jefferson, A., Grant, G., November 2, 2005. Groundwater systems of the McKenzie

River watershed, Oregon High Cascades. Cooperative State Research Education

and Extension Service Conference, Groundwater under the Pacific Northwest,

Stevenson, Washington.

(81) Grant, G., Stewart, G. and Bromley, C. October 18, 2005. New insights into the

geomorphic response of rivers to dam removal from field and laboratory studies.

Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, Salt Lake City, UT. Published as

GSA Abstracts with Programs 37 (7) p.328.

(82) Grant, G.E. and Stewart, G. July 20, 2005. What can we learn from the removal of

little dinky dams? Managing Watersheds for Human and Natural Impacts:

Engineering, Ecological, and Economic Challenges, Williamsburg VA. American

Society of Civil Engineers.

(83) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Jefferson, A. May 23, 2005. The Ultimate Hydrologic

Sponge: Hydrology and Dynamics of a Young Volcanic Arc in a Mediterranean

Climate, American Geophysical Union Joint Assembly, New Orleans, LA.

Published as Eos Trans. AGU 86 (18), Jt. Assem. Suppl., Abstract V13C-01

(84) *Grant, G.E. February 2005. Wicked Geomorphological Problems in Gravel-bed

River Ecosystems, Department of Geosciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis,

Oregon.

(85) *Grant, G.E.; O'Connor, J.E.; Schmidt, J.C., Hattanji, T., December 17, 2004. An

Analytical Framework for Predicting the Downstream Geomorphic Effects of

Dams on Rivers. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, CA.

Published as Eos Trans. AGU 85 (47), Fall Meeting Suppl., Abstract H51F-01

(86) *Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Jefferson, A. December 14, 2004. Geologically Mediated

Groundwater Storage can be a First-Order Control on Streamflow Response to

Changing Climate. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, CA.

Published as Eos Trans. AGU 85 (47), Fall Meeting Suppl., Abstract H21F-1089

(87) Grant, G.E., Tague, C., Jefferson, A., Wampler, P. November 9, 2004. A river runs

underneath it: New insights into hydrogeology of the Oregon Cascades and the role

of national forest lands. Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, Denver,

CO. Published as GSA Abstracts with Programs, 36 (5) p414.

(88) Grant, G.E., Stewart, G., Bromley, C. November 7, 2004. Geomorphic response of

rivers to removal of large and small dams: new findings from field and

experimental studies. Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, Denver, CO.

Published as GSA Abstracts with Programs, 36 (5) p12.

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(89) *Grant, G.E., Bromley, C., Stewart, G., Hayes, S. October 12, 2004. Out, out dam

spot! Emerging science and policy issues for dam removal. University of Oregon

Environmental Journalism, Eugene Oregon.

(90) *Grant, G., Bromley, C., Stewart, G. September 22, 2004. The Geomorphic

Response of Rivers to Dam Removal. Center for Riverine Science and Stream Re-

naturalization Conference - Assessing and Re-naturalizing Streams Impacted By

Dams and Dam Removal, Missoula Montana. (keynote)

(91) *Grant, G.E. June 24-27, 2004. A geomorphic framework for predicting the

downstream response of rivers to dams. 2nd International Association of

Geomorphologists Yangtze Fluvial Conference, Shanghai, China.

(92) *Grant, G. June 7, 2004. Hydro-geomorphic interactions in gravel bed rivers: old

paradigms and new insights. North American Benthological Society 52nd Annual

Meeting, Vancouver, BC. (plenary)

(93) *Grant, G.E. and O’Connor, J.E. April13, 2004. What makes the Deschutes so

peculiar? State of the Deschutes Conference, KahNeeTah, Oregon.

(94) Grant, G.E., Gupta, V.K., December 12, 2003. Froude-number based spatio-

temporal scaling of braided stream channels. American Geophysical Union Fall

Meeting, San Francisco, CA. Published as Eos Trans. AGU 84 (46), Fall Meeting

Suppl., Abstract NG51A-0839.

(95) Jefferson, A.J., Grant, G.E. November 4, 2003. Recharge areas and discharge of

groundwater in a young volcanic landscape, McKenzie River, Oregon. Geological

Society of America annual Meeting, Seattle, WA. Published as GSA Abstracts with

Programs 35 (6) p.373.

(96) *Grant, G.E., June 25, 2003. Changing Stream Flow Regimes: Causes,

consequences and implications for forest and watershed management. Forest

Service scientists meeting (ECOP)

(97) *Grant, G.E. May 13, 2003. Controls on sediment and water production in the

Cascades. North Santiam Watershed Planning Group, Salem, Oregon.

(98) *Grant, G.E. March 20, 2003. Fires, floods, and watershed dynamics: a Coast

Range perspective. Society of American Foresters, Coos Bay, Oregon.

(99) Grant, G.E., O’Connor J.E., Fassnacht, H., McClure, E., Currans, J., Hosman. K.

March 12, 2003. Geology Is Destiny: Geomorphic and Geologic Controls on

Channel Response to Floods and Dams, Deschutes River, OR. USDA Forest

Service Dams & Geomorphology Workshop, Reno, Nevada.

(100) *Grant, G., Preston, N., Landon, N., Fyrins, K. and Trustrum, N., Feb 13, 2003.

Geomorphic controls on sediment delivery, transport and deposition: some new

perspectives. International Workshop on Sediment Management in River Systems,

Gisborne, New Zealand. (Cooperative project of the France/New Zealand Cultural

Agreement)

(101) *Grant, G.E., Feb 13, 2003. Emerging U.S. issues in river science and

management. International Workshop on Sediment Management in River Systems,

Gisborne, New Zealand. (Cooperative project of the France/New Zealand Cultural

Agreement)

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(102) *Grant, G.E. October 23, 2002. Research needs for dam removal. Heinz Center

Conference on Dam Removal, Manassas, Virginia.

(103) *Grant, G.E., October 12, 2002. A dam is not a dam is not a dam: observations,

ruminations and obfuscations of an aging geomorphologist. 33rd Binghamton

International Geomorphology Symposium, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. (keynote)

(104) Lancaster, S.T., Hayes, S.K., and Grant, G.E. May 2002. Modeling sediment and

wood storage and dynamics in small mountainous watersheds. Geological Society

of America Cordilleran Section Meeting, Corvallis, Oregon. (poster)

(105) *Grant, G.E., May 5, 2002. Emerging Issues for water sediment and rivers: an

international cross-cultural comparison. International Association for Sediment

Water Science 9th International Symposium, Banff, Alberta.

(106) *Grant, G.E. April 15, 2002. Geomyths and geomorphs: What have we learned in

50 years of research on effects of forest harvest on streamflow and sediment

transport in western Oregon? Geosciences Departmental Seminar, Oregon State

University, Corvallis, Oregon.

(107) *Grant, G.E., Hulse, D., Niemi, E., March 21, 2002, Establishing correlations

between upland forest management practices and the economic consequences of

stream turbidity in municipal supply watersheds. Decision Making and Valuation

for Environmental Policy (DMVEP) Workshop, NSF & EPA, Washington D.C.

(108) *Grant, G.E., Feb 27, 2002. Out, Out, Dam Spot! Geomorphic Response of Rivers

to Dam Removal. Department of Geology, University of Montana, Missoula,

Montana.

(109) *Grant, G.E., Lancaster, S.T., Hayes, S. December 13, 2001. Interactions among

Riparian Vegetation, Wood, and Fluvial Processes: a Pacific Northwest Drainage

Basin Perspective American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, CA.

Published as Eos Trans. AGU 82 (47), Fall Meeting Suppl., Abstract H41I-02

(110) Grant, G.E., Nov. 29, 2001, “How watersheds work: hydrologic and geomorphic

concepts for understanding the landscape”, Portland Science Connections, Portland,

Oregon; Similar talk given on October 20, 2001 at the Yachats Mushroom Festival.

(111) Grant, G.E., Nov. 15, 2001, “Where does the water in the Willamette come from?”,

Willamette River Forum, Corvallis, Oregon

(112) Grant, G.E.*, O’Connor, J., Fassnacht, H., and McClure, E., Nov., 8, 2001,

“Summary of key findings from the Deschutes River Geomorphology Project”,

presentation to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and public, Madras,

Oregon

(113) Grant, G.E.*, Tague, C., and Hayes, S., Nov. 1, 2001, “A geohydrologic context for

interpreting peak and low streamflows from the Cascade Range, OR”, Geosciences

Dept. Seminar, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon

3. Professional Meetings, Conferences, Workshops

Geoethics in the Field: Integrating Ethical Principles into Geoscience Fieldwork Practices.

American Geosciences Institute, Webinar (CEU) course participant, May 2018.

Social Justice Education Initiative, OSU Professional Development Course, participant,

May 2018.

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Transgender Inclusion 101, OSU Office of Institutional Diversity and Basic Rights

Oregon, participant, April 2018.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, Camp

Kiwanilong, Warrenton OR. April 2018.

Conversation Skills Refresher: Nine Ideas at the Heart of Influence with Paul Axtell, OSU

Center for Learning & Organizational Development participant, Corvallis OR, April

2018.

Coaching: A Process for Developing Talent with Paul Biwan, OSU Center for Learning &

Organizational Development participant, Corvallis OR, February 2018.

American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting, abstract co-author, conference

attendee, New Orleans LA, December 2017.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, Division events coordinator,

abstract co-author, conference attendee and field trip participant, Seattle WA, October

2017.

FACET II: Feedbacks Among Climate, Erosion and Tectonics conference, conference

manager, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, July 2017.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, Rock Springs

Ranch, Tumalo OR, April 2017

American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting, abstract co-author, conference

attendee, San Francisco CA, December 2016.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, Division events coordinator,

conference attendee and field trip participant, Denver CO, September 2016.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, Rock Springs

Ranch, Tumalo OR, May 2016

Pacific Northwest Water Research Symposium, OSU Hydrophiles, invited judge, Corvallis

OR. April 2016.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, presenter, Division events

coordinator, conference attendee and field trip participant, Baltimore MD, November

2015.

Water Research Symposium, OSU Hydrophiles, invited judge, Corvallis OR. April 2015.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, Camp

Collins, Gresham OR. April 2015.

Conversation Skills Refresher: Can We Be Five Times More Productive, Work Less and

Be Less Stressed? with Paul Axtell, OSU Center for Learning & Organizational

Development participant, Corvallis OR, April 2015.

American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting, abstract co-author, conference

attendee, OSPA judge, San Francisco CA, December 2014.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, presenter, session chair, Division

events coordinator, conference attendee and field trip participant. Vancouver BC,

October 2014.

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Water Research Symposium, OSU Hydrophiles, invited judge, Corvallis, OR. May 2014.

Conversation Skills Refresher: Making Meetings Matter with Paul Axtell, OSU Center

for Learning & Organizational Development participant, Corvallis OR, April 2014.

Conversation Skills Refresher: Going Deeper on Defense Mechanisms with Paul Axtell,

OSU Center for Learning & Organizational Development participant, Corvallis OR,

April 2014.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, Camp

Collins, Gresham OR. April 2014.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, presenter, Division events

coordinator, conference attendee and field trip participant, Denver CO, October 2013.

Water Research Symposium, OSU Hydrophiles, invited judge, Corvallis, OR. May 2013.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, Charleston

Oregon, April 2013.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, conference attendee and field trip

participant, Charlotte NC, November 2012.

Water Research Symposium, OSU Hydrophiles, invited judge, Corvallis, OR. May 2012.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, Charleston

Oregon, April 2012.

American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting, abstract co-author, conference

attendee, OSPA judge, San Francisco CA, December 2011.

Watering the Forests for the Trees, Joint USFS/OSU/BLM workshop, organizer,

discussion leader, Blue River OR November 2011.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, conference attendee and field trip

participant, Minneapolis MN, October 2011.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, HJ Andrews

Experimental Station, Blue River OR. April 2011.

Journey into Leadership IX, OSU Center for Learning & Organizational Development,

participant, Corvallis OR, December 2010. – April 2011.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, conference attendee and field trip

participant, Denver, CO. October 2010.

Visioning workshop on Water & Watersheds for USDA Forest Service scientists,

organizer & discussion facilitator, Blue River OR, November 2010.

The Bretz Club conference and field trip, conference organizer and attendee, HJ Andrews

Experimental Station, Blue River OR. May 2010

Modeling workshop on sediment transport in rivers, International River Interface

Cooperative (IRIC), organizer, Corvallis OR May 2010.

Conversation Skills 2-day workshop with Paul Axtell, OSU Center for Learning &

Organizational Development participant, Corvallis OR, April 2009.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, conference attendee, field trip

development, Portland OR, October 2009.

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Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, abstract co-author, conference

attendee, Seattle WA, November 2003.

Presenting Data and Information: 1-day course with Edward Tufte, participant, Portland,

Oregon, Spring 2003.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Cordilleran Section Meeting, abstract co-author,

conference attendee, Corvallis OR, May 2002.

Slope Stability and Landslides Short Course, University of Wisconsin Continuing Studies

Program, received certificate of completion, Los Angeles CA, February 2000.

American Geophysical Union (AGU) Annual Meeting, conference attendee, San

Francisco, CA, December 1999.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, presenter, received QG&G

Howard Award for MS research, Toronto ON, November 1998.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Northeast Section Meeting, abstract co-author, field

trip co-leader, conference attendee, Burlington VT. 1998.

Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, presenter, Salt Lake City UT,

October 1997.

New England Intercollegiate Geologic Conference, abstract co-author, field trip co-leader,

conference attendee, Killington VT, 1997

Geological Society of America (GSA) Northeast Section Meeting, abstract co-author,

conference attendee, King of Prussia PA. 1997.

New England Intercollegiate Geologic Conference, abstract co-author, field trip co-leader,

conference attendee, Mt Washington NH, 1996

4. Certifications/Licenses

Oregon Registered Geologist 2016-present: National Association of State Boards of

Geology (ASBOG) Fundamentals of Geology Examination passed March 2016, Practice

of Geology Examination passed September 2016.

5. Classes and Workshops Taught

OSU Graduate Seminar, Reading & Conference/Special Topics in Geomorphology

(GEO_505_002), instructor, developed syllabus and grading criteria, in conjunction with

Geomorphology Round Table, Spring 2016, Spring 2017, Winter 2018.

NSF funded Willamette Valley Watershed Partnership Project, science instructor, Salem,

Oregon. 2005-2007. Developed and taught geology and hydrology curriculum to middle

school and high schools teachers for intensive 2 week summer courses. Performed

follow-up school visits, one-day workshops and mentoring of teachers to help bring

science curriculum to their classrooms. PI: Jesse Ford (OSU Fish & Wildlife)

USDA Forest Service Dams & Dam Removal Workshop, instructor, Reno NV, March

2003. Created teaching modules to explore the impact of dams on the Clackamas River,

and possible responses to their removal. Content included in 2 CD ROM and web

presentation published as a Forest Service General Technical Report. Received citation

from Forest Service Director of Lands for contributions to the workshop.

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6. Mentoring of students (OSU)

Informal support and advising of undergraduate students, graduate students, and post-

doctoral associates affiliated with the Watershed Processes Group: Chris Bromley,

Barbara Burkholder, Nathan Casebeer, Beth Copeland, Allison Danner, Terry Frueh,

Carolyn Gombert, Laura Hempel, Anne Jefferson, Rachel LovellFord, Shawn Majors,

Jesse Mellick, Caroline Nash, Meredith Payne, Jeff Phillipe, Gregory Stewart, Laurel

Stratton, Emily Underwood, Peter Wampler, J. Rose Wallick, Jack Zunka.

Training and supervision of field and office employees: Phillip Kast, John Metta, Shawn

Majors, Kath Taylor, Cris Martin, Austin Hall, Elizabeth Jachens, Cara Walter.

7. Funded Research Involvement

USFS/OSU Joint Venture Agreement, 2018-2021. Evolution of rivers and landscapes in

the Pacific Northwest: a critical zone perspective. Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS)/

Andrew Meigs (CEOAS)

Consortium of Universities for the Advancement of Hydrological Sciences (CUAHSI),

2018. “Hydroshare end-user testing and assessment” Supervising P.I, Gordon Grant

(CEOAS/USFS)

USFS/OSU Joint Venture Agreement, 2013-2018. “Interpreting hydro-geomorphic

responses of streams and landscapes to climate change: new management options and

tools.” Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS)/ Andrew Meigs (CEOAS)

Oregon Sea Grant 2017-2018. “Retrodicting earthquake source characteristics from

tsunami inundation along the Oregon coast.” Supervising P.I. Andrew Meigs (CEOAS).

NSF-EAR, Tectonics, 2017-present. “FACET II: Feedbacks Among Climate, Erosion and

Tectonics“ Supervising PI, Eric Kirby (CEOAS)

USFS/OSU Joint Venture Agreement, 2014-2018. “Climate Vulnerability: Center for

Advanced Forest Ecosystem Research” Supervising P.I.: Gordon Grant (USFS) / Chris

Still (FES).

USFS/OSU Joint Venture Agreement, 2014-2017. “Salmon responses to shifts in

hydrology due to climate change. Supervising PI: Rebecca Flitcroft (USFS)/ Ivan

Arismendi (F&W).

OSU Foundation (private donor), 2013 – 2016. “Cottonwood Creek Watershed

Observatory” Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS).

NSF-EAR, Hydrologic Sciences, 2015-2016. “Flows of the Future: Capitalizing on an

extreme weather year to evaluate future summer streamflows in the Cascades.”

Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS)/ Anne Nolin (CEAOS)

NSF-EAR, Geosciences, 2010-2016. “Anticipating water scarcity and informing

integrative water system response in the Pacific Northwest.”. Supervising PI: Gordon

Grant (USFS)

USGS, NW Climate Science Center, 2012-2014. “Climate change and peak flows:

knowledge-to-action to help managers address impacts on streamflow dynamics and

aquatic habitat.” Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS)/ Anne Nolin (CEAOS).

USFS/OSU Cooperative Agreement 2009-2014. “Hydro-geomorphic response to climate

change in the Pacific Northwest”. Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS)/ Andrew Meigs

(CEOAS)

Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board (OWEB), 2010-2012. “Risk analysis for climate

warming impacts on summer streamflow.” Supervising PI: Gordon Grant.

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NOAA, Federal Appropriation Project, 2009-2011. “Disease Reduction Research in

Klamath River Salmon”. Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS).

NSF-EAR, Geomorphology, 2009-2012. “Climatic and Geomorphic Triggering

Mechanisms of Cascadian Periglacial Debris Flows.” Supervising PI: Gordon Grant

(USFS)/ Anne Nolin (CEAOS)

USFS/OSU Cooperative Agreement, 2006-2011. “Impact of Gravel Augmentation on

Temperature in the Clackamas River.” Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS)/ Roy

Haggerty (CEAOS).

USGS/ Institute for Water and Watersheds (IWW), 2007-2008. “Contributions of Glacier

Melt to Upper Hood River Streamflow and Implications of Climate Change.”

Supervising PI: Anne Nolin (CEAOS).

Bureau of Land Management, 2005-2006. Effects of peak flows on stream channel

morphology” Supervising PI: Stephen Lancaster

USGS/Center for Water and Environmental Sustainability (CWESt), 2005-2006. Influence

of climate change on water supply in the McKenzie River Basin: Analysis of ling-term

and spatial hydrologic data. Supervising PI: Anne Nolin (CEOAS)

USFS/OSU Cooperative Agreement 2004-2009. “Geomorphic response to changing water

and sediment regimes”. Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS)/ Stephen Lancaster

(CEAOS).

USGS/Center for Water and Environmental Sustainability (CWESt) and Eugene Water &

Electric Board, 2003-2005. “Discharge, source areas, and water ages of spring-fed

streams and implications for water management in the McKenzie River Basin.”

Supervising PI: Gordon Grant (USFS).

Oregon Headwaters Research Consortium (OHRC), 2002-2004. “Headwaters of the

Willamette Basin.” Supervising PI: Gordon Grant

Army Corps of Engineers, 2002-2003. “Cougar Reservoir Drawdown and Sedimentation,

South Fork McKenzie River, OR”. Supervising PI: Gordon Grant

USFS/OSU Cooperative Agreement 2001-2004. “New approaches for evaluating

watershed response to changing flow and sediment regimes”. Supervising PI: Gordon

Grant (USFS)/ Andrew Meigs (CEOAS)

VI. SERVICE

1. Service to the University

Coordination of a weekly Geomorphology Round Table seminar for 51 academic quarters

since Fall 2001, archived at http://wpg.forestry.oregonstate.edu/geomorph-seminars. This

informal seminar provides a forum for students and faculty from Oregon State University

and affiliated research organizations to discuss topics in hydrology and geomorphology.

Responsibilities include seminar topic choice, participant recruitment, speaker and field

trip scheduling, listserv maintenance and active participation in discussions.

Faculty Member, Water Resources Graduate Program 2014- Present. Authorized to teach

graduate courses, direct non-thesis students and serve on student committees. Meet with

prospective graduate students, provide mentoring to current WRGP students, and advise

on evaluation procedures for student presentations & posters at the annual research

symposium.

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Primary grant writer and administrator of Joint Venture and Cooperative Agreements

between OSU faculty and Gordon Grant, USDA Forest Service (>$2,000,000).

Assistance with collaborative proposals among university professionals and Gordon Grant

to funding agencies including US Army Corps of Engineers (2002, 2016), National

Science Foundation (2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2012, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018), US

Geological Survey (2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2016), National

Resource Institute (2002), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (2006),

California Energy Commission (2008), National Park Service (2008), National Air and

Space Administration (2014), Department of Energy (2014), Department of Defense

(2014), Landscape Conservation Cooperative, Department of Interior (2014, 2016).

2. Service to the Profession

A) Professional Societies

Geological Society of America (GSA), member 1997-present.

Quaternary Geology & Geomorphology Division, member 1999-present.

Hydrogeology Division, member 2001-present.

American Geophysical Union member 2011-present.

American Women Geoscientists member 2012-present.

B) Committees, Commissions and Boards

Secretary, Quaternary Geology and Geomorphology (QG&G) Division of GSA, 2012-

2020. http://community.geosociety.org/qggdivision/home Considered the

“backbone” of the division, the secretary has oversight on all tasks of the division,

ensuring that management board members meet responsibilities and maintain the

division mission. The Secretary runs the non-scientific events of the division at the

GSA Annual Meeting, and chairs the selection committees for GSA’s Kirk Bryan

Award for Research Excellence, the Gladys Cole Research Award, and the QG&G

Distinguished Career Award. I have been re-elected to this position twice by the

membership.

Conference Organizer, Bretz Club, 2010-present:

http://wpg.forestry.oregonstate.edu/bretz-club This annual geomorphology

conference and field trip for those studying Oregon Geomorphology is a venue for

sharing new ideas and recent research among academics, researchers, managers and

consultants. As primary organizer, I choose and secure the conference venue,

develop the schedule, advertise the conference, manage the registration and

catering, and maintain the list serv and website. I share responsibility with four

colleagues for the scientific program (invited speakers & field trip), and participate

in the conference.

C) Manuscript Review

Occasional reviewer for Hydrological Processes and Anthropocene.

Formal and informal editing and review of manuscripts authored by research collaborators,

including:

(1) Deligne, N.I., McKay, D., Conrey, R.M., Grant, G.E., Johnson, E.R., O’Connor,

J.E., Sweeney, K. Field Trip Guide to Mafic volcanism of the central Oregon

Cascades – A volcanic, tectonic, hydrologic, and geomorphic journey. 2017.

Scientific Investigations Report 2017-5022-H. US Geological Survey, Reston

94p.

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(2) Tyler, S., Chandra, S., and Grant, G. 2017. Management strategies for sustainable

western water, Eos 98. doi:10.1029/2017EO071701.

(3) Clifton, C., Day, K., Dello, K., Grant, G., Halofsky, J., Isaak, D.J., Luce, C.,

Safeeq, M., Staab, B., Stevenson, J., Chapter 3: Climate Change and Hydrology

in the Blue Mountains. In Halofsky, Jessica E.; Peterson, David L., eds. 2017.

Climate change vulnerability and adaptation in the Blue Mountains. Gen. Tech.

Rep. PNW-GTR-939. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest

Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. p25-52.

(4) Grant, G.E., O'Connor, J.E. and Wolman, M.G. 2013. A River Runs Through it:

Conceptual Models in Fluvial Geomorphology. In: John F. Shroder J. (ed.),

Treatise on Geomorphology. Volume 9, pp.6-21. San Diego: Academic Press

(5) Wallick, J.R., Grant, G.E, Lancaster, S.T., Bolte J.P. and R.P. Denlinger. 2008.

Patterns and controls on historical channel change in the Willamette River,

Oregon USA. In Gupta A.V., ed. Large Rivers: Geomorphology and

Management. John Wiley and Sons. p491-516.

(6) Hunt, A.G., Grant, G.E. and Gupta, V.K. 2006. Spatio-temporal scaling of

channels in braided streams. Journal of Hydrology, 322:192–198.

doi:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2005.02.034.

(7) Piegay, H., G.Grant, F. Nakamura, and N. Trustrum. 2006. Braided River

Management: From assessment of river behavior to improved sustainable

development. In: G Sambrook Smith, J. Best, C. Bristow, and G. Petts (eds):

Braided Rivers: Process, Deposits,

(8) Nolin, A.W., Daly, Christopher, 2006. Mapping “At Risk” Snow in the Pacific

Northwest, Journal of Hydrometeorology, 7:1164-1171.

(9) Hassan, Marwan A., Michael Church, Thomas E. Lisle, Francesco Brardinoni,

Lee Benda, and Gordon E. Grant, 2005. Sediment Transport and Channel

Morphology of Small, Forested Streams. Journal of the American Water

Resources Association (JAWRA) 41(4):853-876.

(10) Wilcock, P.R. J.C. Schmidt, M.G. Wolman, W.E. Dietrich, D. Dominick, M.W.

Doyle, G.E. Grant, R.M. Iverson, D.R. Montgomery, T.C. Pierson, S.P. Schilling,

and R.C. Wilson, 2003. When Models Meet Managers: Examples From

Geomorphology. in Prediction in Geomorphology, P.R. Wilcock and R.M.

Iverson eds. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC p 41-50.

(11) Lancaster, S.T., Hayes, S.K., and Grant, G.E., 2003. The effects of wood on

debris flow runout in small mountainous watersheds. Water Resources Research

39(6):1168, doi:10.1029/2001WR001227.

3. Service to the Public (professionally related)

Preparation of over 230 talks and posters (not included in V.2. Publications) for

presentations by Gordon Grant (USFS) and other research colleagues to local and

regional non-profit, government, academic and outreach organizations.

Editing and graphics preparation for USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research

Stations Science Findings Newsletters. *where acknowledged collaborator

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Sarah L. Lewis

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(1) *Oliver, Marie with Gordon Grant, 2017. Liberated Rivers: Lessons from 40 years of

Dam Removal. Science Findings. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture,

Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. February (193): 6p.

(2) *Watts, Andrea with Gordon Grant and Mohammad Safeeq, 2016. Flows of the

Future – How will climate change affect streamflows in the Pacific Northwest?

Science Findings. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,

Pacific Northwest Research Station. July (187): 6p.

(3) Oliver, Marie with Gordon Grant and Barbara Burkholder 2011. Thermal Pollution in

rivers: Will adding gravel help to cool them down? Science Findings. Portland, OR:

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station.

March (133): 6p.

(4) *Parks, Noreen with Gordon Grant 2009. A ravenous river reclaims its true course:

the tale of Marmot Dam's demise. Science Findings. Portland, OR: U.S. Department

of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. March (111): 6p.

(5) *Thompson, Jonathan with Gordon Grant 2007. Running Dry: Where will the west

get its water? Science Findings. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture,

Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. September (97): 6p.

(6) Thompson, Jonathan with Gordon Grant 2006. Does wood slow down "Sludge

Dragons?" The interaction between riparian zones and debris flows in mountain

landscapes. Science Findings. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest

Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. September (86): 6p.

(7) Thompson, Jonathan with Gordon Grant 2005. Out, out, dam spot! the geomorphic

response of rivers to dam removal. Science Findings. Portland, OR: U.S. Department

of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. March (71): 6p.

(8) Duncan, Sally with Gordon Grant. 2003. Clarifying muddy water: probing the

linkages to municipal water quality. Science Findings. Portland, OR: U.S.

Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station.

December (59): 6p.

(9) Duncan, Sally with Gordon Grant. 2002. Geology as destiny: cold waters run deep in

western Oregon. Science Findings. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture,

Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. December (49): 6p.

4. Service to the Public (non-professionally related)

Corvallis Community Children’s Centers, Inc. (CCCC) Board of Directors, 2008 to 2011,

(Chair 2009 to 2011) and Fundraising Committee Chair, 2006 to 2009. CCCC operated

Growing Oaks, an Oregon State University affiliated daycare and pre-school serving the

children of OSU students, staff and faculty, and the surrounding community. CCCC also

provides training experience for students in early education degree programs.

VII. HONORS, AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS

Outstanding Faculty Research Assistant, College of Earth Ocean and Atmospheric

Sciences, Oregon State University, 2016

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Science Findings Awards, USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station,

recognizing the finest research currently produced by the Station and its partners,

presented to G.E. Grant with Lewis as collaborator in 2007, 2009, 2016, 2017, 2018.

Arthur D. Howard Award from the Geomorphology and Quaternary Geology Division of

the Geological Society of America, for outstanding research in Quaternary geology and

geomorphology by a master’s student, 1998. This research proposal also received grants

from the Geological Society of America Student Research Grant Program and Sigma Xi

in 1998.

Graduate Teaching Fellow of the Year, Geology Department, University of Vermont 1998

Excellence in Master’s Research, University of Vermont, 1998

Best student presentation at the 1998 spring meeting of the Vermont Geological Society.

Awarded National Association of Geoscience Teachers / United States Geological Survey

Summer Field Internship in 1997, based on excellent performance at the Indiana

University Geologic Field Camp (Tobacco Root Mts, Montana, Summer 1996)

Dr. Louis Berger Scholarship for Geology from Tufts University, 1995.