William B. Ouimet
Associate Professor/Earth Sciences
Storrs Mansfield
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Scholarly Contributions
203 Scholarly Contributions
Tectonic geomorphology along the eastern margin of Tibet Insights into the pattern and processes of active deformation adjacent to the Sichuan Basin
2011
Research Type: Journal Article
Landslides associated with the May 12 2008 Wenchuan earthquake Implications for the erosion and tectonic evolution of the Longmen Shan
2010
Research Type: Journal Article
Landscape form and millennial erosion rates in the San Gabriel Mountains CA
2010
Research Type: Journal Article
Beyond threshold hillslopes Channel adjustment to baselevel fall in tectonically active mountain ranges
2009
Research Type: Journal Article
The influence of large landslides on river incision in a transient landscape Eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau Sichuan China
2007
Research Type: Journal Article
Modeling sediment flux from Birch Brook an undisturbed catchment in North Western Massachusetts,
2002
Research Type: Journal Article
Keck Colorado Project: Fire and Catastrophic Flooding, Fourmile Catchment, Front Range, Colorado
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Keck Connecticut Project: Holocene Environmental Change and Human Impacts in southern New England
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
ANTHROPOGENIC MODIFICATIONS TO UPLAND SOILS FROM HISTORIC LAND USE IN SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
HISTORIC LAND USE IMPACTS ON UPLAND SOILS AND EROSION IN SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
A RECORD OF EARLY HOLOCENE WILDFIRES AND 18-20 TH CENTURY HUMAN IMPACTS IN AN UPLAND WETLAND IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Organic molecular paleohypsometry: A new approach to reconstructing the paleoelevation history of an orogen
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Keck Colorado Project: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Critical Zone, Boulder Creek Catchment, Front Range, Colorado, in ‘’, April 2013.
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Extreme landscape disequilibrium, slow erosion and shifting elevations during rapid mountain building
Research Type: Journal Article