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Geomorphology and Tectonics
at the University of Arizona

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See a recent guest blogpost I contributed to TopoToolbox on mapping hilltop curvature!

I am a postdoctoral geologist at the University of Arizona. I work on a wide array of problems in geomorphology, tectonics, and surface processes. Through my research, I interpret how surface processes, variable landslide triggering mechanisms, and tectonic and climatic processes drive landscape evolution over broad spatial and temporal scales. My work incorporates field observations, quantitative landscape analysis, signal processing, dendrochronology, and numerical modeling. My current projects focus on the contributions of debris flows to steepland evolution; hillslope processes and morphometry; landslide geochronology in the Oregon Coast Range and greater Cascadia to better pinpoint particular bedrock landslide triggering events; constraining how landform scale dictates the evolution of drainage networks; and mapping subsidence and stream capture in the Cascadia forearc, with particular emphasis on the Willamette Valley.

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