twentyseventeen
domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init
action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/hydrogeologymsu/public_html/wordpress/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121Cycles of nitrogen and phosphorus have been driven out of balance by anthropogenic processes. My work seeks to understand nutrient sources and transport at regional scales. As an NSF graduate research fellow, I led development on the Spatially Explicit Nutrient Source Map (SENSMap) in the Great Lakes Basin, a product that quantifies seven N and P source applications at 30 m resolution. I am interested in modelling the fate of these nutrient applications as they move across the land surface and through groundwater.<\/p>\n
MS Student September 2017 \u2013 present, Environmental Geosciences, Michigan State University
\nBS Geographic Information Science 2017, Michigan State University<\/p>\n
Hamlin, Quercus F., Kendall, Anthony D., Martin, Sherry L., Whitenack, Henry D., Roush, Jacob A., Hannah, Bailey A., Hyndman, David W. \u201cSpatially Explicit Nutrient Source Map (SENSMap): Quantifying Landscape Nutrient Inputs in the Great Lakes Basin.\u201d Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences (In Review)<\/p>\n
Hamlin, Quercus F., Kendall, Anthony D., Martin, Sherry L., Hyndman, David W. \u201cQuantifying Nutrient Loading Landscapes using Spatially Explicit Maps in the Great Lakes Basin\u201d. Poster. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting. 12 December 2018.<\/p>\n
Hamlin, Quercus F., Kendall, Anthony D., Martin, Sherry L., Hyndman, David W. \u201cQuantifying Nutrient Inputs in the Great Lakes Basin with SENSMap (Spatially Explicit Nutrient Source Map)\u201d. Oral. US International Association for Landscape Ecology Annual Meeting. 11 April 2018.<\/p>\n
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