Jonathan D. Mackay
British Geological Survey
37 Papers
68 Citations
Jonathan D. Mackay is an academic researcher from British Geological Survey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Groundwater & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 26 publications. Previous affiliations of Jonathan D. Mackay include Natural Environment Research Council & University of Birmingham.
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Papers
Climate change and water in the UK - past changes and future prospects
Glen Watts,Richard W. Battarbee,John P. Bloomfield,Jill Crossman,Andre Daccache,Isabelle Durance,J. Alex Elliott,Grace Garner,Jamie Hannaford,David M. Hannah,Tim Hess,Christopher R. Jackson,Alison L. Kay,Martin Kernan,Jerry W. Knox,Jonathan D. Mackay,Don Monteith,Steve J. Ormerod,Jemima Rance,Marianne E. Stuart,Andrew J. Wade,Steven Wade,Paul Whitehead,Robert L. Wilby +23 more
TL;DR: The authors reviewed the impact of anthropogenic climate change on water in the UK and looked at projections of future change, concluding that future changes in rainfall and evapotranspiration could lead to changed flow regimes and impacts on water quality, aquatic ecosystems and water availability.
Assessment of ground-based monitoring techniques applied to landslide investigations
Sebastian Uhlemann,Sebastian Uhlemann,Alister Smith,Jonathan Chambers,Neil Dixon,Tom Dijkstra,Edward Haslam,Philip Meldrum,A. Merritt,David Gunn,Jonathan D. Mackay +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the performance of a combination of monitoring techniques that have been employed together for the first time on an active landslide in the Whitby Mudstone Formation at Hollin Hill, North Yorkshire, UK.
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Long-range forecasts of UK winter hydrology
Cecilia Svensson,Anca Brookshaw,Adam A. Scaife,Victoria A. Bell,Jonathan D. Mackay,Christopher R. Jackson,Jamie Hannaford,Helen Davies,Alberto Arribas,S. Stanley +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that skilful long-range forecasts of winter flows can now be achieved across the whole of the UK due to a remarkable geographical complementarity between the regional geological and meteorological sources of predictability for river flows.
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Hydrological Outlook UK: an operational streamflow and groundwater level forecasting system at monthly to seasonal time scales
Christel Prudhomme,Jamie Hannaford,Shaun Harrigan,D. B. Boorman,Jeff Knight,Victoria A. Bell,Christopher R. Jackson,Cecilia Svensson,Simon Parry,Nuria Bachiller-Jareno,Helen Davies,Richard Davis,Jonathan D. Mackay,Andrew McKenzie,A. C. Rudd,Katie Smith,John P. Bloomfield,Rob Ward,Alan Jenkins +18 more
TL;DR: The Hydrological Outlook UK (HOUK) as mentioned in this paper is the first seasonal hydrological forecasting service for the UK, which is based on three complementary approaches combined to produce the outlooks: (i) national-scale modeling of streamflow and groundwater levels based on dynamic seasonal rainfall forecasts, (ii) catchment-scale modelling where stream flow and groundwater level models are driven by historical meteorological forcings (i.e. the Ensemble Streamflow Prediction, ESP, approach), and (iii) a catchment scale statistical method based on persistence and historical analogues
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