E. Johnstone
Aberystwyth University
11 Papers
101 Citations
E. Johnstone is an academic researcher from Aberystwyth University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Fluvial. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 11 publications.
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Papers
Past hydrological events reflected in the Holocene fluvial record of Europe
Mark G. Macklin,Gerardo Benito,Kenneth J. Gregory,E. Johnstone,John Lewin,Danuta J. Michczyńska,Roman Soja,Leszek Starkel,Varyl R. Thorndycraft +8 more
TL;DR: A comprehensive database of radiocarbon dated fluvial units in Great Britain, Poland and Spain has been compiled to investigate the relationship between environmental change, flooding and Holocene river dynamics as mentioned in this paper.
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High-resolution interpretative geomorphological mapping of river valley environments using airborne LiDAR data
TL;DR: In this article, the use of airborne LiDAR data and GIS technology facilitates the rapid production of geomorphological maps of floodplain environments; however, unfiltered data, which include vegetation and buildings, are currently more suitable for geomorphology mapping than data that have been filtered to remove these features.
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Interpreting alluvial archives: sedimentological factors in the British Holocene fluvial record
TL;DR: In this paper, a Holocene alluvial archive of 506 dated units for Great Britain is analysed in terms of the sedimentation styles involved, and the database is classified by sedimentation unit (channel sediments, palaeochannel fills, floodplain surface sedimentiments, floodbasins and colluvial deposits).
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Pervasive and long-term forcing of Holocene river instability and flooding in Great Britain by centennial-scale climate change
TL;DR: Macklin, Mark, Johnstone, E., Lewin, J., and Lewin this article describe the long-term forcing of Holocene river instability and flooding in Great Britain by centennial-scale climate change.
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The development and application of a database of radiocarbon-dated Holocene fluvial deposits in Great Britain
TL;DR: In this article, the development of a British database of 14C dated Holocene fluvial units over the last 15 years has been reported, which serves as a powerful research tool for investigating the spatial and temporal dynamics of Holocene river development and flooding in Great Britain.
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