
Katherine Chapman
Articles
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Oct 8, 2024 |
pubs.usgs.gov | Paul E. Grams |David Topping |Gerard Salter |Katherine Chapman
Links More information: Publisher Index Page (via DOI) Download citation as: RIS | Dublin Core Study Area Publication type Article Publication Subtype Journal Article Title Implementation of controlled floods for sediment management on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon under aridification Series title River Research and Applications DOI 10.1002/rra.4374 Edition Online First Year Published 2024 Language English Publisher Wiley Contributing office(s) Southwest Biological Science Center Country...
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Oct 2, 2024 |
onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Paul E. Grams |David Topping |Gerard Salter |Katherine Chapman
1 Introduction After accumulating runoff from headwater streams in the Rocky Mountains of the western United States, the Colorado River traverses the arid plateaus and lowlands of the desert southwest (Figure 1). Along its course, water from the Colorado River is utilized for municipalities, industry, and agriculture through a network of dams, reservoirs, and diversions that move water within and outside of the Colorado River basin.
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Aug 2, 2023 |
inkl.com | Katherine Chapman
The report said health and social care workers are worst affected, followed by those in wholesale and retail, accommodation and food services, and education. Many workers whose job involves variable hours or shift work, have been called into work with less than a week’s notice, with some having less than 24 hours’ notice, said the report.
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Jun 28, 2023 |
wonkhe.com | Katherine Chapman |Mark Leach |Meredith Wilkinson |Beth Sennett
Universities are bastions of progress, knowledge and social change. Yet, there is a crucial aspect of fairness and social responsibility that all too often goes overlooked: paying a real living wage. As vital civic institutions, there is a moral case for universities ensuring at least the real living wage, and it might just help with some of the challenges the higher education sector is facing along the way.
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Mar 29, 2023 |
metro.co.uk | Katherine Chapman
On a family holiday to Exmoor in 2021, my brother Steven and I both packed some rather unusual luggage - our portable dialysis machines. I'd do mine during the day in short bursts, and he had his set up in his bedroom to dialyse overnight. We often joked about going off to spend some time with our machines. But holidaying with Steven, now 46, his wife Jeni and their two boys gave us something else to think about too.
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