User:QIANZHANG: Difference between revisions

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|Institute member=Johns Hopkins University
|Institute member=Johns Hopkins University
|Postal address 1 member=3400 North Charles Street
|Postal address 1 member=3400 North Charles Street
|Postal address 2 member=Ames Hall 506
|City member=Baltimore
|City member=Baltimore
|Postal code member=21218
|Postal code member=21218
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|State member=Maryland
|State member=Maryland
|Confirm email member=qzhang19@jhu.edu
|Confirm email member=qzhang19@jhu.edu
|Working group member=Terrestrial Working Group, Chesapeake Focus Research Group
|Working group member=Hydrology Focus Research Group, Chesapeake Focus Research Group, Critical Zone Focus Research Group, Ecosystem Dynamics Focus Research Group
|Emaillist group member=yes
|Emaillist group member=yes
}}
}}
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Revision as of 14:48, 25 December 2014




Qian Zhang, website username login: QIANZHANG

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Johns Hopkins University
USEPA Chesapeake Bay Program
410 Severn Ave., Suite 112
Baltimore, Maryland
21403
United States
qzhang19@jhu.edu
https://sites.google.com/site/qianzhangatjhu/home

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Member of the following CSDMS groups

  • Hydrology Focus Research Group
  • Chesapeake Focus Research Group
  • Critical Zone Focus Research Group
  • Ecosystem Dynamics Focus Research Group

Signed up for the mailing list: yes

CSDMS-related interest

I am particularly interested in computationally-intensive modeling and synthesis of large-scale data sets for watersheds and other ecosystems. My PhD research focuses on long-term export of nutrients and sediment from the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Specific areas include (1) evaluation of long-term water-quality trends and uncertainties; (2) improvement of statistical methods for riverine flux estimation and trend analysis; (3) analysis of patterns of watershed constituent export and controlling factors.

As a watershed data analyst (assistant research scientist) at the USEPA Chesapeake Bay Program (CBP), my main role is to work with professionals, managers, and scientists in the Chesapeake Bay partnership to explore natural and anthropogenic-based causes behind the observed current status and long-term trends in the water quality of the streams and rivers to the Chesapeake Bay, which is critical to defining the success of Chesapeake Bay and watershed restoration efforts to date and to making science-based management decisions in the foreseeable future.