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David M. Hannah

David M. Hannah. Professor of Hydrology, University of Birmingham Head of School, Geography, Earth & Env. Sci. UK National Representative for International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS) Vice President IAHS-International Comm. for Surface Water

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David M. Hannah

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  1. David M. Hannah • Professor of Hydrology, University of Birmingham • Head of School, Geography, Earth & Env. Sci. • UK National Representative for International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS) • Vice President IAHS-International Comm. for Surface Water • UNESCO-International Hydrology Programme (FRIEND) • Editorial boards: Hydrological Processes, Ecohydrology • >19 years experience of developing new approaches to monitor, analyse and model water-dependent system • >130 publications (>90 international journal papers) • Research cited >2,200 with h-index = 29 d.m.hannah@bham.ac.uk

  2. Chris Bradley • MA University of Cambridge, UK; MA Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada; PhD, University of Leicester, UK • Senior Lecturer, University of Birmingham • School Head of Quality Assurance • Universitas-21 Water Futures Committee • UK National Committee of British Hydrological Society (BHS) • >20 years research experience, specialising in developing integrated approaches to monitoring and modelling freshwater systems • >50 publications (including Hydrological Processes, Hydrological Sciences Journal, Journal of Hydrology, Quaternary Science Reviews, Remote Sensing of the Environment) c.bradley@bham.ac.uk

  3. Water quantity & quality: range of environments

  4. Water quality: large river systems Applications of environmental fluorescence in UK & South Africa

  5. New river monitoring technologies Telemetry technology Wireless sensor network field observation  telemetry  near-real time data retrieval  warning system old technology NEW technology

  6. Advantages of new river monitoring technologies • High reliability  secure data collection and storage • Small and discrete installation  very limited visibility  low risk of human damage/ theft • Continuous monitoring  better characterise events • Zero time-drift  synchronised network to atomic clock • Low power consumption  avoid data loss • Radio or GPRS signals not dependent on network access • Smart triggering of samplers in response to events at a site • Communication between sampling locations  trigger monitoring at other sites (e.g. to capture downstream pollution plumes) • Near-real time data display of data on PC or mobile device • Data access from any internet connection to near-real time and archived information (for unlimited users) • Near-real time local and remote alarms = phone voice message, SMS text messages, loudhailer, flashing signals or other hardware

  7. Birmingham city water quality monitoring sites

  8. Technology in action: Bournbrook, Birmingham

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