This page is no longer updated. The Macaulay Land Use Research Institute joined forces with SCRI on 1 April 2011 to create The James Hutton Institute.
Please visit the James Hutton Institute website.
The influence of geomorphological complexity on hydromorphological condition within recently deglaciated streams - Megan Klaar, Ian Maddock, and Alexander Milner
Hierarchical controls on river channel morphology in montane drainage basins in the Cairngorms, Scotland - Addy, S. J., Hartley, A. J. and Soulsby, C.
Defining Hydromorphological conditions for Rivers of Northern Spain - Pardo, I., Abrain, R. Miranda, A. & González-Piedra, J.
Collaborative Development of a North American Spatial Framework for River Assessment and Classification - Joseph E. Flotemersch, Paul Seelbach, Iris Goodman, James Thorp, Arlene Olivero, Scott Robinson
Using Remote-Sensing Based River Typing to Predict Ecological Function and Ecosystem Services - Joseph E. Flotemersch, James H. Thorp, Bradley S. Williams, Martin C. Thoms
Survey of the Nation’s Non-wadeable Streams and Rivers - Joseph Flotemersch, Treda Smith, Ellen Tarquineo, Steve Paulsen, and Susan Holdsworth
Headwater stream biodiversity in a landscape perspective - Emma Göthe
The Relational SYstem of water course Hydromorphology Auditing: French multi-scale decision-making tool for the WFD implementation - A. Chandesris, N. Mengin, JR. Malavoi, JG Wasson, Y. Souchon
Setting Reference Conditions and Restoration Goals in Urban Rivers: Balancing Ecological and Human Objectives - Kristen Podolak and Matt Kondolf
Quantifying the role of sediment supply on channel evolution, habitat availability and food web dynamics - Lee R. Harrison, Lindsey K. Albertson, Carl J. Legleiter, Thomas Dunne, Bradley J. Cardinale and Aleksandra M. Wydzga
River MImAS: A new approach to assessing the morphological impacts to rivers - Stuart Grieg, Roy Richardson and Chris Bromley