David E. Tenenbaum, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2005 | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC |
Area:
Hydrology, Environmental Sciences, Physical Geography, Remote SensingGoogle:
"David Tenenbaum"Parents
Sign in to add mentorLawrence Band | grad student | 2005 | UNC Chapel Hill | |
(Multi-scale analysis of moisture patterns in urbanizing landscapes.) |
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Publications
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Rizinjirabake F, Tenenbaum DE, Pilesjö P. (2019) Data for assessment of soil water extractable and percolation water dissolved organic carbon in watersheds. Data in Brief. 27: 104779 |
Rizinjirabake F, Abdi AM, Tenenbaum DE, et al. (2018) Riverine dissolved organic carbon in Rukarara River Watershed, Rwanda. The Science of the Total Environment. 643: 793-806 |
Maio CV, Tenenbaum DE, Brown CJ, et al. (2013) Application of geographic information technologies to historical landscape reconstruction and military terrain analysis of an american revolution battlefield: Preservation potential of historic lands in urbanized settings, boston, massachusetts, USA Journal of Cultural Heritage. 14: 317-331 |
Peters DL, Atkinson D, Monk WA, et al. (2013) A multi-scale hydroclimatic analysis of runoff generation in the Athabasca River, Western Canada Hydrological Processes. 27: 1915-1934 |
Maio CV, Gontz AM, Tenenbaum DE, et al. (2012) Coastal hazard vulnerability assessment of sensitive historical sites on Rainsford Island, Boston Harbor, Massachusetts Journal of Coastal Research. 28: 20-33 |
Tenenbaum DE, Cadenasso ML, Band LE, et al. (2006) Using transects to sample digital orthophotography of urbanizing catchments to provide landscape position descriptions Giscience and Remote Sensing. 43: 323-351 |
Tenenbaum DE, Band LE, Kenworthy ST, et al. (2006) Analysis of soil moisture patterns in forested and suburban catchments in Baltimore, Maryland, using high-resolution photogrammetric and LIDAR digital elevation datasets Hydrological Processes. 20: 219-240 |
Band LE, Tague CL, Brun SE, et al. (2000) Modelling watersheds as spatial object hierarchies: Structure and dynamics Transactions in Gis. 4: 181-196 |