Jessica D. Lundquist
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Assistant Professor ph 206.685.7594 |
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EDUCATION
PhD University of California, San Diego, Oceanography, 2004
MS University of California, San Diego, Oceanography, 2000
BS University of California, Davis, 1999
RESEARCH INTERESTS
Hydroclimatology and relative importance of hydrologic processes at different basin scales, with a focus on mountain watersheds in the western United States. Field study and modeling of snowmelt, hydrology, and meteorology within nested subbasins of alpine watersheds. Laboratory experiments and field observations
PUBLICATIONS
Journal Publications
FULL CURRICULUM VITAE (PDF)Journal Publications (peer reviewed)
Lundquist, J., M. Dettinger, and D. Cayan, 2005. Snow-fed streamflow timing at different basin scales: Case study of the Tuolumne River above Hetch Hetchy, Yosemite, California. Water Resour. Res., 41, W07005, doi:10.1029/2004WR003933.
Lundquist, J. and M. Dettinger, 2005. How snowpack heterogeneity affects diurnal streamflow timing. Water Resour. Res., 41, W05007, doi:10.1029/2004WR0003649.
Lundquist, J. and A. Flint, 2005. 2004 onset of snowmelt and streamflow: How shading and the solar equinox may affect spring runoff timing in a warmer world. J. Climate, submitted August 2005.
Lundquist, J., D. Cayan, and M. Dettinger, 2004. Spring onset in the Sierra Nevada: When is snowmelt independent of elevation? J. Hydromet., 5, 325-340.*
* Paper selected to receive Wagner Memorial Award for Women in Atmospheric Sciences, 2003.Lundquist, J.D., D.R. Cayan and M.D. Dettinger, 2003. Meteorology and hydrology in Yosemite National Park: A sensor network application. In Information Processing in Sensor Networks, F. Zhao and L. Guibas (eds.): IPSN 2003, LNCS 2634, 518-528.
Lundquist, J. and D. Cayan, 2002. Seasonal and spatial patterns in diurnal cycles in streamflow in the Western United States. J. Hydromet., 3, 591-603.**
** Featured as Paper of Note in Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, January 2003.
Journal Publications (not peer reviewed)Lundquist, J., R. Dole, M. Dettinger, and D. Cayan, 2005. Surface Temperature Patterns and Lapse Rates: Implications for Water Resources and Studies of Mountain Climate Change. Proceedings, MTNCLIM Meeting, Chico Hot Springs, Montana.
Lundquist, J., 2005. Onset of snowmelt and streamflow in a warmer world. Bull. Am. Met. Soc., 86, 480-481.
Lundquist, J. and M. Dettinger, 2004. The effect of basin scale on diurnal streamflow timing. Proceedings, Western Snow Conference. Vancouver, British Colombia. *Best student paper award.
Lundquist, J. and D. Cayan, 2003. Diurnal cycles in streamflow in the Western United States. Bull. Am. Met. Soc., 84, 16-17.
Lundquist, J. and M. Dettinger, 2003. Linking diurnal cycles in river discharge to interannual variations in climate. Proceedings, AMS 17th Conference on Hydrology. Long Beach, California.
Lundquist, J., N. Knowles, M. Dettinger and D. Cayan, 2002. Snow, topography, and the diurnal cycle in streamflow. Proceedings, Western Snow Conference. Granby, Colorado.
Lundquist, J. D. and T. B. Bourcy, 2000. California and Oregon humidity and coastal fog. Proceedings, 14th Conference on Boundary Layers and Turbulence. Aspen, Colorado.
Lundquist, J. 1999. California and Oregon humidity and coastal fog: A study of summer 1996. SIO Reference Number: 99-17. 89 pp.
