HWR Directory: Adjuncts and Academic Professionals

R.L. Bassett
Adjunct Professor

Ph.D., Stanford University, 1976.
Ground-water Geochemistry. Nuclear waste disposal. Mathematical models and field sampling methodology in geochemistry.

R.C. Bales
Adjunct Professor
Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1985.
Alpine hydrology, snow and ice, contaminant fate and transport in natural waters, water chemistry.
E.J. Burke
Adjunct
Assistant Professor
Ph.D., Reading University, United Kingdom, 1997.
Passive microwave remote sensing of land surfaces; land surface modeling.
R.A. Clark
Adjunct Professor
Ph.D., Texas A & M, 1964.
Hydrometeorology, surface hydrology, river forecasting systems, remote sensing.
M.H. Conklin
Adjunct Professor
Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1986.
Behavior and transport of organic contaminants in natural water and soil systems.
X. Gao
Adjunct
Assistant Professor
Ph.D.,The University of Arizona, 1993.
Hydroclimatology, fluid dynamics, mathematics and mechanics.
D.C. Goodrich
Adjunct
Associate Professor

Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1990.
Surface hydrology, rainfall-runoff modeling.

James Hogan
Adjunct
 
K.L. Hsu
Adjunct
Assistant Professor
Ph.D., Univerisity of Arizona, 1996.
Remote sensing of precipitation, hydrologic systems modeling, stochastic hydrology, and hydrologic applications of artificial neural networks.
B. Imam
Adjunct
Assistant Professor
Associate Director (HyDIS)
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1994.
Regional hydrologic modeling, uncertainty analysis, application of GIS and remote sensing to data in land surface modeling.
L. Leonhart
Adjunct
Associate Professor
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1978.
Hydrology, hydrogeology, watershed hydrology, groundwater characterization studies, environmental assessment, remote sensing and soil contamination studies.
R.D. MacNish
Adjunct Professor
Ph.D., The University of Michigan, 1966.
Hydrology, geomorphology, ground water models, sediment transport processes, stream-aquifer interaction.
R. Maddox
Adjunct
Assistant Professor
Ph.D., Colorado State University, 1981.
Synoptic and mesoscale meteorology; weather analysis
and forecasting; severe thunderstorms, southwest North
American Monsoon studies; applications of satellite
and radar observations to weather analysis and forecasting.
R.J. McConnell
Adjunct
Assistant Professor
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1997.
Snow and ice chemistry and hydrology, biogeochemical cycles, paleo-climate studies using ice cores.
Norman L. Miller Adjunct Professor Ph.D., The University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1987.
Modeling and analysis of regional climate, streamflow, and impacts. Understanding past, present, and future climate on regional and sub-regional spatial scales at various temporal resolutions.
J.E. Smith
Adjunct
Assistant Professor
Ph.D., University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 1995.
Vadose zone hydrology; immiscible flow through porous media including LNAPL's and DNAPL's; subsurface flow and transport.
S. Sorooshian
Regents' Professor
Director, SAHRA
Ph.D., University of California-Los Angeles, 1978.
Rainfall-runoff modeling, application of remote sensing to hydrology, model calibration, hydroclimatology.
D. Tartakovsky
Adjunct
Associate Professor
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1996.
Stochastic partial differential equations, uncertainty quantification, flow transport in porous media, multiphase flows.
R. Varady
Adjunct
Professor
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1981.
Environment, natural-resources, water-management policy. Environmental conflict resolution. History of environment, natural-resources, agriculture, infrastructure.
J. Washburne
Adjunct
Assistant Professor
Assistant Director
(Ed-STC-SAHRA)
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1994.
Modeling basin-scale hydrology/runoff using remotely sensed data; land surface parameterization in mesoscale and smaller hydrologic models; assimilation of soil moisture into hydrologic models; applying emerging technologies to distributed hydrologic modeling.
R.H. Webb
Adjunct
Associate Professor
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1985.
Paleohydrology; flood-frequency analysis; geomorphology; riparian ecology; unsaturated zone hydrology.
C.L. Winter
Adjunct Professor
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1982.
Stochastic theory of subsurface flow and transport, in cartographic analysis, and in applications of parallel and distributed computing to those areas.
D. Young
Adjunct
Associate Professor
Ph.D., The University of Arizona, 1994.
Water resource planning and development water rights and law, stream and riparian restoration, arid lands resources, water and wastewater utility management and operation, water quality, aquatic biology and chemistry, and natural resource management and economics.
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Department of Hydrology and Water Resources
College of Engineering - The University of Arizona
John W. Harshbarger Building
1133 E James E. Rogers Way Tucson, AZ 85721
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