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From Geoscience Paper of the Future
Highest Contributors
The Geoscience Paper of the Future (GPF) activity aims to demonstrate how papers will be published in the future, going beyond a PDF format and including software, datasets, and workflow all published in open and accessible ways that make the paper transparent, reproducible, and machine indexable. We refer to such a paper as a geoscience paper of the future, or GPF for short.
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Name | Affiliation | Research Area | Topic of the paper |
Harmony Colella | Arizona State University | Geophysics and fault mechanics | TBD |
Cedric David | NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | Hydrology and river modeling | River Network Routing on the NHDPlus Dataset |
Ibrahim Demir | University of Iowa | Hydrology | Optimization and evaluation of hydrological network representation techniques for fast access and query in web-based system |
Wally Fulweiler | Boston University | Coastal marine ecosystems and biogeochemistry | A long-term data set of direct sediment N2 fluxes in a temperate estuary in Rhode Island |
Leif Karlstrom & Lay Kuan Loh | University of Oregon & Carnegie Mellon University | Volcanology and fluid mechanics | Spectral clustering of spatial point clouds for volcanic vents and associated attributes |
Kim Miller | Columbia University/Lamont Observatory | Earth surface processes | Effects of intermittency on delta dynamics |
Heath Mills | University of Houston Clear Lake | Marine geomicrobiology | Molecular Characterization of Water Column Microbial Populations within the Northern Gulf of Mexico Hypoxic Zone |
Suzanne Pierce | University of Texas Austin | Hydrogeology | Collaborative decision support for water management |
Jordan Read & Luke Winslow | US Geological Survey | Ecology and physical limnology | Lake catchment modeling |
Mimi Tzeng | Dauphin Island Sea Lab | Marine biology | Egress of Juvenile Gray Snapper, Lutjanus griseus, from New River, North Carolina |
Sandra Villamizar | University of California Merced | River ecohydrology | Using whole stream metabolism to assess the response of river ecosystems to flow disturbance events - The case of the San Joaquin River restoration effort. |
Xuan Yu | University of Delaware | Hydrogeology | A semidiscrete finite volume formulation for multiprocess watershed simulation |
Acknowledgments
This activity is organized by the GeoSoft project as part of the [1] EarthCube initiative of the US National Science Foundation.