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Ron Copeland has worked for the Corps of Engineers for over 5 decades, 52 years at the Los Angeles district and the Corps' Coastal and Hydraulics lab in Vicksburg Mississippi. He also worked for 10 years as a principle engineer at Mobile Boundary Hydraulics, which was the premiere 1D sediment transport modeling firm for decades. But Dr. Copeland has not only been on a very short list of the very best 1D sediment transport modelers for decades, he also developed several equations and algorithms that multiple models use. In 2020, he won the ASCE, Hans Albert Einstein award.
And, while I think Dr. Copeland's modeling expertise has a lot of value to the community growing around this podcast (and we spent some time talking modeling) his sediment and river mechanics contributions include much more . He led a team who wrote the Corps early guidance on restoration channel design and developed an important, expedited, tool to evaluate sediment continuity of restored channels, a common failure mode of early restoration projects. We talked to him about all of that...and some more technical topics that we spun out into video shorts (see the website link).
This series was funded by the Regional Sediment Management (RSM) program.
Mike Loretto edited the first three seasons and created the theme music.
Tessa Hall is editing most of Season 4.
Stanford Gibson (HEC Sediment Specialist) hosts.
Video shorts and other bonus content are available at the podcast website:
https://www.hec.usace.army.mil/confluence/rasdocs/rastraining/latest/the-rsm-river-mechanics-podcast
...but most of the supplementary videos are available on the HEC Sediment YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/stanfordgibson
If you have guest recommendations or feedback you can reach out to me on LinkedIn or ResearchGate or fill out this recommendation and feedback form: https://forms.gle/wWJLVSEYe7S8Cd248
By Stanford Gibson5
2121 ratings
Ron Copeland has worked for the Corps of Engineers for over 5 decades, 52 years at the Los Angeles district and the Corps' Coastal and Hydraulics lab in Vicksburg Mississippi. He also worked for 10 years as a principle engineer at Mobile Boundary Hydraulics, which was the premiere 1D sediment transport modeling firm for decades. But Dr. Copeland has not only been on a very short list of the very best 1D sediment transport modelers for decades, he also developed several equations and algorithms that multiple models use. In 2020, he won the ASCE, Hans Albert Einstein award.
And, while I think Dr. Copeland's modeling expertise has a lot of value to the community growing around this podcast (and we spent some time talking modeling) his sediment and river mechanics contributions include much more . He led a team who wrote the Corps early guidance on restoration channel design and developed an important, expedited, tool to evaluate sediment continuity of restored channels, a common failure mode of early restoration projects. We talked to him about all of that...and some more technical topics that we spun out into video shorts (see the website link).
This series was funded by the Regional Sediment Management (RSM) program.
Mike Loretto edited the first three seasons and created the theme music.
Tessa Hall is editing most of Season 4.
Stanford Gibson (HEC Sediment Specialist) hosts.
Video shorts and other bonus content are available at the podcast website:
https://www.hec.usace.army.mil/confluence/rasdocs/rastraining/latest/the-rsm-river-mechanics-podcast
...but most of the supplementary videos are available on the HEC Sediment YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/stanfordgibson
If you have guest recommendations or feedback you can reach out to me on LinkedIn or ResearchGate or fill out this recommendation and feedback form: https://forms.gle/wWJLVSEYe7S8Cd248

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