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Earth Science

D-Index
38
Citations
4871
World Ranking
6573
National Ranking
2325

Overview

Mark T. Stacey is affiliated with the University of California, Berkeley in the United States. Their research primarily spans Earth and Planetary Sciences and Environmental Science, with substantial contributions to several subfields.

The main areas of study include:

  • Atmospheric Science
  • Earth-Surface Processes
  • Ecology
  • Oceanography
  • Global and Planetary Change

Stacey's work covers multiple topical domains such as:

  • Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
  • Coastal and Marine Dynamics
  • Coastal wetland ecosystem dynamics
  • Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
  • Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies
  • Infrastructure Resilience and Vulnerability Analysis
  • Aeolian processes and effects

The scientist has co-authored publications multiple times with various researchers including Michelle A. Hummel, Alain Tcheukam Siwe, Aaron C. Chow, Samer Madanat, and L.S. Engel. Collaboration appears frequent with these colleagues across diverse topics.

Publication venues where Stacey's research frequently appears include:

  • Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)
  • Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans
  • Earth's Future
  • Journal of Geophysical Research Earth Surface
  • Climatic Change

Recent papers authored or co-authored by Stacey encompass the following:

  • Interacting Infrastructure Disruptions Due to Environmental Events and Long-Term Climate Change, 2020, Earth's Future
  • Collective action problems and governance barriers to sea-level rise adaptation in San Francisco Bay, 2021, Climatic Change
  • Numerical Investigation of Baroclinic Channel-Shoal Interaction in Partially Stratified Estuaries, 2020, Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans
  • Assessing the Influence of Shoreline Adaptation on Tidal Hydrodynamics: The Role of Shoreline Typologies, 2020, Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans
  • Residual Sediment Transport in Tidally Energetic Estuarine Channels With Lateral Bathymetric Variation, 2020, Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans

Best Publications

  • Structure and Flow-Induced Variability of the Subtidal Salinity Field in Northern San Francisco Bay

    Stephen G. Monismith;Wim Kimmerer;Jon R. Burau;Mark T. Stacey

  • Measurements of Reynolds stress profiles in unstratified tidal flow

    Mark T. Stacey;Stephen G. Monismith;Jon R. Burau

  • Projected Evolution of California's San Francisco Bay-Delta-River System in a Century of Climate Change

    James E. Cloern;Noah Knowles;Larry R. Brown;Daniel Cayan

  • Observations of Turbulence in a Partially Stratified Estuary

    Mark T. Stacey;Stephen G. Monismith;Jon R. Burau

  • Creation of residual flows in a partially stratified estuary

    Mark T. Stacey;Jon R. Burau;Stephen G. Monismith

  • Coupling of Sea Level Rise, Tidal Amplification, and Inundation

    Rusty C. Holleman;Mark T. Stacey

  • Biological communities in San Francisco Bay track large‐scale climate forcing over the North Pacific

    James E. Cloern;Kathryn A. Hieb;Teresa Jacobson;Bruno Sansó

  • Interaction of lateral baroclinic forcing and turbulence in an estuary

    Jessica R. Lacy;Mark T. Stacey;Jon R. Burau;Stephen G. Monismith

  • The Scaling and Structure of the Estuarine Bottom Boundary Layer

    Mark T. Stacey;David K. Ralston

  • Wind-enhanced resuspension in the shallow waters of South San Francisco Bay: Mechanisms and potential implications for cohesive sediment transport

    Andreas Brand;Jessica R. Lacy;Kevin Hsu;Daniel Hoover

  • Stratification dynamics and gravitational circulation in northern San Francisco Bay

    Stephen G. Monismith;Jon R. Burau;Mark T. Stacey

  • On the effects of topography on wind and the generation of currents in a large multi-basin lake

    Francisco J. Rueda;S. Geoffrey Schladow;Stephen G. Monismith;Mark T. Stacey

  • Sea Level Rise Impacts on Wastewater Treatment Systems Along the U.S. Coasts

    Michelle A. Hummel;Matthew S. Berry;Mark T. Stacey

  • Convergences and divergences and thin layer formation and maintenance

    Mark T. Stacey;Margaret A. McManus;Jonah V. Steinbuck

  • Suspended sediment fluxes at an intertidal flat: The shifting influence of wave, wind, tidal, and freshwater forcing

    Stefan A. Talke;Mark T. Stacey

  • Effects of bed roughness on boundary layer mixing and mass flux across the sediment-water interface

    M. A. Reidenbach;M. Limm;M. Hondzo;M. T. Stacey

  • Tidal and meteorological forcing of sediment transport in tributary mudflat channels

    David K. Ralston;Mark T. Stacey

  • Statistical Models of Temperature in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta Under Climate-Change Scenarios and Ecological Implications

    R. Wayne Wagner;Mark Stacey;Larry R. Brown;Michael Dettinger

  • Turbulent characteristics of a shallow wall-bounded plane jet: experimental implications for river mouth hydrodynamics

    Joel C. Rowland;Mark T. Stacey;William E. Dietrich

  • Implications for Future Survival of Delta Smelt from Four Climate Change Scenarios for the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, California

    Larry R. Brown;William A. Bennett;R. Wayne Wagner;Tara Morgan-King

  • Plume dispersion in a stratified, near-coastal flow: measurements and modeling

    Mark T Stacey;Edwin A Cowen;Thomas M Powell;Elizabeth Dobbins

Frequent Co-Authors

Stephen G. Monismith
Stephen G. Monismith Stanford University
Margaret A. McManus
Margaret A. McManus University of Hawaii at Manoa
Patrick L. Barnard
Patrick L. Barnard United States Geological Survey
Jeffrey R. Koseff
Jeffrey R. Koseff Stanford University
Thomas M. Powell
Thomas M. Powell University of California, Berkeley
David K. Ralston
David K. Ralston Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Oliver B. Fringer
Oliver B. Fringer Stanford University
John P. Ryan
John P. Ryan Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Michael D. Dettinger
Michael D. Dettinger Scripps Institution of Oceanography
James E. Cloern
James E. Cloern United States Geological Survey

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