Funding is available for a PhD student to study alluvial sandbar dynamics 
on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon. The research objective is to better 
understand the highly localized nature of eddy sandbar responses to 
hydrologic regime, at the event scale (such as during floods) as well as 
longer-term morphodynamics. The project will make use of an extensive data 
set from 40 autonomously operating digital camera systems ('remote 
cameras') which have been providing oblique high-resolution color imagery 
(http://grandcanyon.usgs.gov/giswebdev/sandbarphotoviewer2/RemoteCameraTimeS
eries.html), up to 12 times per day, for several years (at some sites, 
going back to 2008). This wealth of data can be used to explore sandbar 
responses to flows at a range of timescales (from hours to years) as well 
as other important aspects of the river corridor such as vegetation 
encroachment and erosional processes. Additional data sets include (annual 
or sub-annual) ground-based topographic surveys, and other remote sensing 
data sets derived from aerial imagery (collected in 2005, 2009, and 2013).
The PhD funding will include full tuition, stipend, and health insurance. 
The student will be based at the Remote Sensing and Geoinformatics Lab 
(https://sites.google.com/a/nau.edu/remote-sensing-lab/), advised by Dr. 
Sankey, School of Earth Sciences and Environmental Sustainability, and 
Informatics and Computing Program, Northern Arizona University. The student 
will also work closely with USGS GCMRC (Grand Canyon Monitoring Research 
Center; www.gcmrc.gov) research scientists – specifically Dr Daniel 
Buscombe, Dr Paul Grams and Dr Erich Mueller - and a large group of 
academic and government researchers working in Grand Canyon and throughout 
the Colorado River Basin. The project will involve georectification of 
oblique imagery into planform imagery using a network of surveyed ground 
control points at each site. The student will contribute to the development 
of automated or semi-automated algorithms for the segmentation of sandbars 
from georectified images, and the continuing development of a novel 
approach developed at GCMRC to extract 3D topographic data from imagery, 
thus potentially providing a means to estimate sandbar volumes. The ideal 
candidate should have, or is keen to develop, skills in a high-level 
programming language such as Matlab/Python/R/IDL; an interest in image 
processing/photogrammetry and/or remote sensing; a background in 
geomorphology, geology,hydrology, engineering, computer science or related 
discipline. Although this is designed as a PhD position, qualified 
applicants seeking a M.S degree may be considered. Candidates interested in 
the position should contact Dr. Sankey at [email protected].

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