Publications

Italics indicate student co-authors.

  1. Stantis, C., Serna, A., Verostick, A., Tipple, B., Jefferson, A.J., Bowen, G.J. 2024. Isotopic Heterogeneity in U.S. Urban Water Supply Systems Reflects Climatic, Environmental, And Sociodemographic Factors: Implications for Forensic Identification. PLOS ONE, 19(11): e0311741, doi: 10.1371/journal. pone.0311741.
  2. Safdar, S.Jefferson, A.J., Costello, D.M., Blinn, A. 2024. Urbanization and suspended sediment transport dynamics: a comparative study of watersheds with varying degrees of urbanization using concentration-discharge hysteresis. ACS ES&T Water, 4, 9, 3904–3917, doi: 10.1021/acsestwater.4c00214.
  3. Hassan, Z.U.Jefferson, A.J., Avellaneda, P.M., Bhaskar, A.S. 2024. Assessment of hydrological parameter uncertainty versus climate projection spread on urban streamflow and floodsJournal of Hydrology, 638, 131546. doi: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2024.131546.
  4. Back, M.P., Jefferson, A.J., Ruhm, C.T., Blackwood, C.B. 2024. Effects of reclamation and deep ripping on soil bulk density and hydraulic conductivity at legacy surface mines in northeast Ohio, USA. Geoderma, 442, 116788. doi: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.116788.
  5. Jefferson, A.J., Kearns, K., Snyder, K., Mitchell, A., Muratori, S., Rowan, C.J. in review. Anthropogenic litter and plastics across size classes on a mechanically groomed Great Lakes urban beach.
  6. Hempel, L., Grant, G., Hassan, M., Lewis, S., Jefferson, A., Fasth, B.  in review. Hydrograph Shape and Adjustment Timescales Control Channel Organization in a Sand-Gravel Flume.
  7. Blinn, A.J., Jefferson, A.J., Bhaskar, A.S., Hassan, Z.U., Safdar, S., Costello, D.M. in review. Stream metabolism response to storm flow in urban watersheds near Cleveland, OH and Denver, CO.
  8. Farooq, N.Jefferson, A.J.Greising, C., Kearns, K., Muratori, S., Snyder, K. in review. Prediction of anthropogenic macro-debris and its association with geomorphology in US urban streams.
  9. Mulvey, B.K., Jefferson, A.J., Ward, A.S., and Bales, J.D. 2022. Editorial: Innovations in Remote and Online Education by Hydrologic Scientists. Frontiers in Environmental Science. 10:1074801. doi: 10.3389/fenvs.2022.1074801.
  10. Jefferson, A.J., Loheide, S.P. II, and McCay, D.H. 2022. Faculty Perspectives on a Collaborative, Multi-Institutional Online Hydrology Graduate Student Training Program. Frontiers in Water. 4:958094. doi: 10.3389/frwa.2022.958094.
  11. Turner, V.K., Gmoser-Daskalakis, K., Costello, D., Jefferson, A., and Bhaskar, A. 2022Champions and Traditional Technocrats: The Role of Environmental Value Orientation in Stormwater Management. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 58(3):336-354, doi: 10.1111/1752-1688.13015.
  12. CUAHSI Board of Directors and Officers, 2022. COVID-19 Impacts Highlight the Need for Holistic Evaluation of Research and in the Hydrologic Sciences. Water Resources Research, 58(2):e2021WR030930. doi: 10.1029/2021WR030930.
  13. Luce, C., Jefferson, A.J., Pouyat, R.V., Nislow, K., and Carlson, C., in press. The effect of climate change and the wildland-urban interface on water, In: Zipperer, W.C., Marsh, A, Rodbell, P, Mockrin, M., Patel-Weynand, T., Riitters, K., eds. Wildland Urban Interface in the United States: Forests and Rangelands in a Changing Environment. Cham, Switzerland: Springer
  14. Fillo, N.F.., Bhaskar, A.S., and Jefferson, A.J.. 2021. Lawn irrigation contributions to semi-arid urban baseflow based on water-stable isotopesWater Resources Research. 57(8):e2020WR028777. doi: 10.1029/2020WR028777.
  15. Tetzlaff, D., Boyer, E., Doody, T., Jefferson, A.J., Molini, A. 2021. Women advancing research on hydrological processes: PrefaceHydrological Processes. 35(7): e14267. doi: 10.1002/hyp.14267.
  16. Ruggles, T.A., Gerrath, J.A., Ruhm, C.T., Jefferson, A.J., Davis, C.A., and Blackwood, C.B. 2021. Reclaimed surface mines show little progress towards native species forest restoration following 35 years of passive management. Land Degradation and Development. 32(7): 2351-2359. doi: 10.1002/ldr.3904
  17. Avellaneda, P.M. and Jefferson, A.J. 2020. Sensitivity of streamflow metrics to infiltration-based stormwater management networks. Water Resources Research. 56(7): e2019WR026555. doi:10.1029/2019WRR026555
  18. Bell, C.D., Wolfand, J., Panos, C., Bhaskar, A., Gilliom, R., Hogue, T., Hopkins, K.G., Jefferson, A.J. 2020. Stormwater control impacts on runoff volume and peak flow: A meta-analysis of watershed modelling studies. Hydrological Processes. 34(14): 3134-3152. doi:10.1002/hyp.13784
  19. Costello, D., Hartung, E.W., Stoll, J.T., and Jefferson, A.J. 2020. Bioretention cell age and construction style influence stormwater pollutant dynamics. Science of the Total Environment. 712: 135597, doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.135597
  20. Blauch, G., and Jefferson, A.. 2019. If a tree falls in an urban stream, does it stick around? Mobility, characteristics, and geomorphic influence of large wood in urban streams in northeastern Ohio, USA. Geomorphology. 337: 1-14, doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2019.03.033
  21. Jefferson, A.. 2019. Shutdown will cast a long shadow over research. Nature 565, 399, doi: 10.1038/d41586-019-00207-9
  22. Scarlett, R, McMillan, S., Bell, C., Clinton, S., Jefferson, A., and Rao, P.S.C. 2018. Influence of Stormwater Control Measures on Water Quality at Nested Sites in a Small Suburban Watershed. Urban Water Journal, 15:9, 868-879, DOI: 10.1080/1573062X.2019.1579347
  23. Jefferson, A., Kenney, M., Hill, T., and Selin, N. 2018. Universities Can Lead the Way Supporting Engaged GeoscientistsEos. 99, doi:10.1029/2018EO111567. Published on 10 December 2018.
  24. Jefferson, A. and Kenney, M. 2018. Efforts large and small speed science reform. Science. 360(6385): 164. doi:10.1126/science.aat6341. (letter to the editor)
  25. Singer, D.M., Jefferson, A.J.Traub, E.L., and Perdrial, N. 2018. Mineralogical and geochemical variation in stream sediments impacted by acid mine drainage is related to hydro-geomorphic settingElementa: Science of the Anthropocene. 6(1): 31. doi:10.1525/elementa.286
  26. Jefferson, A.J., Bhaskar, A., Fanelli, R., Hopkins, K.G., Avellaneda, P.M., and McMillan, S.K. 2017. Stormwater management network effectivenesss and implications for urban watershed function: a critical reviewHydrological Processes. 31 (23): 4056–4080, doi:10.1002/hyp.11347.
  27. Avellaneda, P.M., Jefferson, A.J., Grieser, J.M. and Bush, S.A., 2017. Simulation of the cumulative hydrological response to green infrastructure. Water Resources Research. 53: 3087–3101, doi:10.1002/2016WR019836.
  28. Bell, C.D., McMillan, S.K., Clinton, S.M., and Jefferson, A.J., 2017. Characterizing the Effects of Stormwater Mitigation on Nutrient Export and Stream Concentrations. Environmental Management. 59: 604-618. doi:10.1007/s00267-016-0801-4.
  29. Thapaliya, D., Hellwig, E.J., Kadariya, J., Grenier, D., Jefferson, A.J., Dalman, M., Kennedy, K., DiPerna, M., Orihill, A., Taha, M., Smith, T.C. 2017. Prevalence and characterization of Staphylococcus aureus and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) on public recreational beaches in Northeast Ohio. GeoHealth. 1: doi:10.1002/2017GH000106.
  30. Turner, V.K., Jarden, K.M., and Jefferson, A.J., 2016. Resident perspectives on green infrastructure in an experimental suburban stormwater management program. Cities and the Environment, 9(1): art. 4.
  31. Bell, C.D., McMillan, S.K., Clinton, S.M., and Jefferson, A.J., 2016. Hydrologic response to stormwater control measures in urban watersheds. Journal of Hydrology. 541: 1488-1500. doi: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2016.08.049.
  32. Jarden, K.M., Jefferson, A.J., and Grieser, J.M. 2016. Assessing the effects of catchment-scale green infrastructure retrofits on hydrograph characteristics. Hydrological Processes, 30(10):1536-1550. doi: 10.1002/hyp.10736.
  33. Griffith, E.M., Ortiz, J.D., and Jefferson, A.J., 2015. Mimicking the Rayleigh isotope effect in the oceans. Oceanography 28(4):96–101, doi: 10.5670/oceanog.2015.89.
  34. Jefferson, A., Bell, C., Clinton, S., and McMillan, S. 2015. Application of isotope hydrograph separation to understand urban stormwater dynamics, Hydrological Processes, 29(25): 5290-5306. doi: 10.1002/hyp.10680.
  35. Reilly, D., Singer, D., Jefferson, A., and Eckstein, Y., 2015. Identification of Local Groundwater Pollution in Northeastern Pennsylvania: Marcellus Flow-back or Not?, Environmental Earth Sciences, 73(12): 8097-8109. doi:10.1007/s12665-014-3968-0.
  36. Jefferson, A., Ferrier, K., Perron, J.T., and Ramalho, R., 2014. Controls on the hydrological landscape evolution of shield volcanoes and volcanic ocean islands, p. 185-213 in Harpp, K.S., Mittelstaedt, E., d’Ozouville, N., and Graham, D.W. (eds), The Galapágos: A Natural Laboratory for the Earth Sciences, AGU Geophysical Monograph Series.
  37. Jefferson, A., Wegman, K., and Chin, A. 2013. Geomorphology of the Anthropocene: Understanding The Surficial Legacy of Past and Present Human Activities, Anthropocene , 2: 1-3, doi:10.1016/j.ancene.2013.10.005.
  38. Freyer, J.B. and Jefferson, A., 2013. An exception to island loss in the engineered Upper Mississippi River: history of land growth in Pool 6 and implications for restoration, Anthropocene., 2: 65-75, doi:10.1016/j.ancene.2013.10.004.
  39. Jefferson, A. and McGee, R.W. 2013. Channel network extent in the context of historical land use, flow generation processes, and landscape evolution in the North Carolina Piedmont, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 38(6): 601-613, doi: 10.1002/esp.3308
  40. Jefferson, A. 2011. Seasonal versus transient snow and the elevation dependence of climate sensitivity in maritime mountainous regions, Geophysical Research Letters, 38, L16402, doi:10.1029/2011GL048346. (Supporting information)
  41. Nolin, A., Phillipe, J., Jefferson, A., and Lewis, S., 2010, Present-day and Future Contributions of Glacier Runoff to Summertime Flows in a Pacific Northwest Watershed: Implications for Water Resources, Water Resources Research, 46, W12509, doi:10.1029/2009WR008968.
  42. O’Driscoll, M., Clinton, S., Jefferson, A., Manda, A., and McMillan S., 2010, Urbanization Effects on Watershed Hydrology and In-Stream Processes in the Southern United States, Water, 2 (3): 605-648. doi:10.3390/w2030605.
  43. Jefferson, A.J., Hannula, K.A., Campbell, P.B., & Franks, S.E., 2010, The Internet as a resource and support network for diverse geoscientists, GSA Today, 20 (9), 59-61, doi: 10.1130/GSATG91GW.1.
  44. Jefferson, A., Grant G., Lewis, S. and Lancaster, S., 2010, Coevolution of hydrology and topography on a basalt landscape in the Oregon Cascade Range, USA., Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 35 (7), 803-816. doi: 10.1002/esp.1976
  45. Cashman, K.V., Deligne, N.I., Gannett, M.W., Grant, G.E, and Jefferson, A., 2009, Fire and water: Volcanology, geomorphology, and hydrogeology of the Cascade Range, central Oregon, in O’Connor, J.E., Dorsey, R.J., and Madin, I.P., eds., Volcanoes to Vineyards: Geologic Field Trips through the Dynamic Landscape of the Pacific Northwest: Geological Society of America Field Guide 15, p. 539-582, doi: 10.1130/2009.fld015(26). (contact me for pdf)
  46. Jefferson, A., Nolin, A., Lewis, S., and Tague, C., 2008. Hydrogeologic controls on streamflow sensitivity to climatic variability, Hydrological Processes. 22: 4371–4385 DOI: 10.1002/hyp.7041.
  47. Tague, C., Farrell, M., Grant, G. Choate, J., and Jefferson A. 2008. Deep groundwater mediates streamflow response to climate warming in the Oregon Cascades, Climatic Change 86: 189-210, doi:10.1007/s10584-007-9294-8
  48. Jefferson A., G. Grant, and T. Rose, 2006. Influence of volcanic history on groundwater patterns on the west slope of the Oregon High Cascades, Water Resources Research, Vol. 42, W12411, doi:10.1029/2005WR004812
  49. Jefferson A., 2006. Hydrology and Geomorphic Evolution of Basaltic Landscapes, High Cascades, Oregon, PhD Dissertation, Oregon State University, 180p. (video presentation)

If you would like copies of any article not linked here, please contact Anne. You can also peruse my ORCID record: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0585-9602.