This study explores the dominant processes that may be responsible for the observed streamflow response in Seventeen Mile Creek, a tropical catchment located in a monsoonal climate in Northern Territory, Australia. The hydrology of this vast region of Australia is little understood due to the low level of information and gauging that is available. Any insights that can be gained from the few well gauged catchments that exist can be valuable for predictions and water resource assessments in other poorly gauged or ungauged catchments in the region. To this end, the available rainfall and runoff data from Seventeen Mile Creek catchment are analyzed through the systematic and progressive development and testing of rainfall-runoff models of in...
An increase in plantation forestry has been linked to a reduction in streamflows in some catchments....
During the period 1975-1990, several research campaigns led by CSIRO with various partners were unde...
An intensive field monitoring programme was conducted in 1998 and 1999 in an 84 ha catchment located...
This study explores the dominant processes that may be responsible for the observed streamflow respo...
This study investigates the main processes that may be responsible for the observed streamflow respo...
International audienceStudy region: Tropical Australia. Study focus: Streams and rivers of the Austr...
Rainfall is the main driver of hydrological processes in dryland environments and characterising the...
Study region: Tropical Australia. Study focus: Streams and rivers of the Australian tropics hav...
Flooding in the tropical Northern Australia is under researched relative to other regions of the con...
Rainfall is the main driver of hydrological processes in dryland environments and characterising the...
It has been almost 50 years since the foundational work at the Babinda catchments in North Queenslan...
1.Northern Australia is characterised by a tropical wet-dry climate that regulates the distinctive c...
Daily streamflow data were analysed to assess which climate and terrain factors best explain streamf...
Partitioning of rainfall into evapotranspiration and runoff is controlled by climate and catchment c...
Land use and climate change/variability can have a major impact on catchment hydrology and these imp...
An increase in plantation forestry has been linked to a reduction in streamflows in some catchments....
During the period 1975-1990, several research campaigns led by CSIRO with various partners were unde...
An intensive field monitoring programme was conducted in 1998 and 1999 in an 84 ha catchment located...
This study explores the dominant processes that may be responsible for the observed streamflow respo...
This study investigates the main processes that may be responsible for the observed streamflow respo...
International audienceStudy region: Tropical Australia. Study focus: Streams and rivers of the Austr...
Rainfall is the main driver of hydrological processes in dryland environments and characterising the...
Study region: Tropical Australia. Study focus: Streams and rivers of the Australian tropics hav...
Flooding in the tropical Northern Australia is under researched relative to other regions of the con...
Rainfall is the main driver of hydrological processes in dryland environments and characterising the...
It has been almost 50 years since the foundational work at the Babinda catchments in North Queenslan...
1.Northern Australia is characterised by a tropical wet-dry climate that regulates the distinctive c...
Daily streamflow data were analysed to assess which climate and terrain factors best explain streamf...
Partitioning of rainfall into evapotranspiration and runoff is controlled by climate and catchment c...
Land use and climate change/variability can have a major impact on catchment hydrology and these imp...
An increase in plantation forestry has been linked to a reduction in streamflows in some catchments....
During the period 1975-1990, several research campaigns led by CSIRO with various partners were unde...
An intensive field monitoring programme was conducted in 1998 and 1999 in an 84 ha catchment located...