Allen C Gellis, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 16
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Channel response to sediment release: insights from a paired analysis of dam removal Channel response to sediment release: insights from a paired analysis of dam removal
Dam removals with unmanaged sediment releases are good opportunities to learn about channel response to abruptly increased bed material supply. Understanding these events is important because they affect aquatic habitats and human uses of floodplains. A longstanding paradigm in geomorphology holds that response rates to landscape disturbance exponentially decay through time. However, a...
Authors
Mathias J. Collins, Noah P. Snyder, Graham Boardman, William S. Banks, Mary Andrews, Matthew E. Baker, Maricate Conlon, Allen C. Gellis, Serena McClain, Andrew Miller, Peter Wilcock
Determining the sources of fine-grained sediment using the Sediment Source Assessment Tool (Sed_SAT) Determining the sources of fine-grained sediment using the Sediment Source Assessment Tool (Sed_SAT)
A sound understanding of sources contributing to instream sediment flux in a watershed is important when developing total maximum daily load (TMDL) management strategies designed to reduce suspended sediment in streams. Sediment fingerprinting and sediment budget approaches are two techniques that, when used jointly, can qualify and quantify the major sources of sediment in a given...
Authors
Lillian E. Gorman Sanisaca, Allen C. Gellis, David L. Lorenz
Geomorphic processes responsible for decadal-scale arroyo changes, Rio Puerco, New Mexico Geomorphic processes responsible for decadal-scale arroyo changes, Rio Puerco, New Mexico
The channel and arroyo of the Rio Puerco have continued to evolve since incision in the late 1800s. Resurveys of channel cross sections and aerial imagery over time indicate that between the 1970s and 1990s, the upstream reaches (type 1 morphology) of the Rio Puerco have continued to undergo construction of an incipient inner floodplain by means of vertical aggradation while...
Authors
Allen C. Gellis, John G. Elliott, Milan Pavich
Sources and ages of fine-grained sediment to streams using fallout radionuclides in the Midwestern United States Sources and ages of fine-grained sediment to streams using fallout radionuclides in the Midwestern United States
Fallout radionuclides, 7Be and 210Pbex, sampled in bed sediment for 99 watersheds in the Midwestern region of the United States and in 15 samples of suspended sediment from 3 of these watersheds were used to partition upland from channel sources and to estimate the age or the time since the surface-derived portion of sediment was on the land surface (0–∼1 year). Channel sources dominate...
Authors
Allen C. Gellis, Christopher C. Fuller, Peter C. Van Metre
Sediment source fingerprinting as an aid to catchment management: A review of the current state of knowledge and a methodological decision-tree for end-users Sediment source fingerprinting as an aid to catchment management: A review of the current state of knowledge and a methodological decision-tree for end-users
The growing awareness of the environmental significance of fine-grained sediment fluxes through catchment systems continues to underscore the need for reliable information on the principal sources of this material. Source estimates are difficult to obtain using traditional monitoring techniques, but sediment source fingerprinting or tracing procedures, have emerged as a potentially...
Authors
A.L Collins, S. Pulley, I.D.L Foster, Allen C. Gellis, P. Porto, A.J. Horowitz
Storms, channel changes, and a sediment budget for an urban-suburban stream, Difficult Run, Virginia, USA Storms, channel changes, and a sediment budget for an urban-suburban stream, Difficult Run, Virginia, USA
Determining erosion and deposition rates in urban-suburban settings and how these processes are affected by large storms is important to understanding geomorphic processes in these landscapes. Sediment yields in the suburban and urban Upper Difficult Run are among the highest ever recorded in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, ranging from 161 to 376 Mg/km2/y. Erosion and deposition of...
Authors
Allen C. Gellis, Michael Myers, Gregory E. Noe, Cliff R. Hupp, Edward Shenk, Luke Myers
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 16
No Result Found
Filter Total Items: 66
Channel response to sediment release: insights from a paired analysis of dam removal Channel response to sediment release: insights from a paired analysis of dam removal
Dam removals with unmanaged sediment releases are good opportunities to learn about channel response to abruptly increased bed material supply. Understanding these events is important because they affect aquatic habitats and human uses of floodplains. A longstanding paradigm in geomorphology holds that response rates to landscape disturbance exponentially decay through time. However, a...
Authors
Mathias J. Collins, Noah P. Snyder, Graham Boardman, William S. Banks, Mary Andrews, Matthew E. Baker, Maricate Conlon, Allen C. Gellis, Serena McClain, Andrew Miller, Peter Wilcock
Determining the sources of fine-grained sediment using the Sediment Source Assessment Tool (Sed_SAT) Determining the sources of fine-grained sediment using the Sediment Source Assessment Tool (Sed_SAT)
A sound understanding of sources contributing to instream sediment flux in a watershed is important when developing total maximum daily load (TMDL) management strategies designed to reduce suspended sediment in streams. Sediment fingerprinting and sediment budget approaches are two techniques that, when used jointly, can qualify and quantify the major sources of sediment in a given...
Authors
Lillian E. Gorman Sanisaca, Allen C. Gellis, David L. Lorenz
Geomorphic processes responsible for decadal-scale arroyo changes, Rio Puerco, New Mexico Geomorphic processes responsible for decadal-scale arroyo changes, Rio Puerco, New Mexico
The channel and arroyo of the Rio Puerco have continued to evolve since incision in the late 1800s. Resurveys of channel cross sections and aerial imagery over time indicate that between the 1970s and 1990s, the upstream reaches (type 1 morphology) of the Rio Puerco have continued to undergo construction of an incipient inner floodplain by means of vertical aggradation while...
Authors
Allen C. Gellis, John G. Elliott, Milan Pavich
Sources and ages of fine-grained sediment to streams using fallout radionuclides in the Midwestern United States Sources and ages of fine-grained sediment to streams using fallout radionuclides in the Midwestern United States
Fallout radionuclides, 7Be and 210Pbex, sampled in bed sediment for 99 watersheds in the Midwestern region of the United States and in 15 samples of suspended sediment from 3 of these watersheds were used to partition upland from channel sources and to estimate the age or the time since the surface-derived portion of sediment was on the land surface (0–∼1 year). Channel sources dominate...
Authors
Allen C. Gellis, Christopher C. Fuller, Peter C. Van Metre
Sediment source fingerprinting as an aid to catchment management: A review of the current state of knowledge and a methodological decision-tree for end-users Sediment source fingerprinting as an aid to catchment management: A review of the current state of knowledge and a methodological decision-tree for end-users
The growing awareness of the environmental significance of fine-grained sediment fluxes through catchment systems continues to underscore the need for reliable information on the principal sources of this material. Source estimates are difficult to obtain using traditional monitoring techniques, but sediment source fingerprinting or tracing procedures, have emerged as a potentially...
Authors
A.L Collins, S. Pulley, I.D.L Foster, Allen C. Gellis, P. Porto, A.J. Horowitz
Storms, channel changes, and a sediment budget for an urban-suburban stream, Difficult Run, Virginia, USA Storms, channel changes, and a sediment budget for an urban-suburban stream, Difficult Run, Virginia, USA
Determining erosion and deposition rates in urban-suburban settings and how these processes are affected by large storms is important to understanding geomorphic processes in these landscapes. Sediment yields in the suburban and urban Upper Difficult Run are among the highest ever recorded in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, ranging from 161 to 376 Mg/km2/y. Erosion and deposition of...
Authors
Allen C. Gellis, Michael Myers, Gregory E. Noe, Cliff R. Hupp, Edward Shenk, Luke Myers