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RSM River Mechanics Podcast

RSM River Mechanics Podcast

De : Stanford Gibson
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Conversations about River Mechanics, Sediment Transport, and Fluvial Geomorphology

© 2026 RSM River Mechanics Podcast
Nature et écologie Science Sciences de la Terre
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    Épisodes
    • Mike Spoor on the Ohio River, Bank Failure, Glacial and Coal Mining Sediment Legacies...and 60 Years Working with Rivers
      Jan 23 2026

      I only know one person who can claim >60 years of federal service. This episode's guest, Mike Spoor. Mike spent those years with the US Army Corps of Engineers Huntington District (in West Virginia on the banks of the Ohio River) and even more years before that as a contractor to the Kansas City District.

      But Mike did not just log federal service. He focused curiosity and insight with a relentless field program to convert those years into insight. Mike's decades of stories on the Ohio River and it's tributaries, and the impact of disturbances old (glaciers) and new (coal mining) is exactly the sort of conversations I had in mind when I launched this project. I don't think we got to 10% of Mike's stories, but somehow managed to cover an impressive range of river processes and projects, and some real insight on how he approaches rivers.

      I talked to Mike about the history of the Ohio River, the flood of record, and untangling the role of glacial-legacy soils on bank failure processes...and how a careful, causal understanding of these processes helped him identify the most cost-effective approach to mittigate them. We also talked about the impact of coal mining on rivers and reservoirs and the island erosion and restoration work that led to his Golden Eagle award.

      It was a fun and informative conversation and I'm thrilled to share it.

      (The interlude music in this episode is Dusty Horizons by Score Wizzard and HEC did the editing on this one).


      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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      1 h et 19 min
    • David Topping on the Grand Canyon Prototype Experiments, Disequilibrium Transport, and Hysteresis
      Jul 27 2025

      Dr. David Topping is a Research Hydrologist with the US Geological Survey.

      He did his undergrad at MIT, a masters and Phd at the University of Washington and has published >100 well cited peer review publications.

      Dr Topping has worked with the USGS for >30 years but for the last 18 or so have been with the Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center in Flagstaff AZ where he has been one of the reasons that the Glen Canyon releases have become in one of the most ambitious and carefully measured protype sediment experiments in history.

      And it is his teams extensive and precise measurements of these experiments and thoughtful analyses of those data that echoed through multiple aspects of my work in the years that followed.

      I went back to the papers we talk about in this episode several times…

      …when I was working on bed mixing algorithms in HEC-RAS

      …and when I was working with the Corps’ Omaha district to restore sand bars on the Missouri river

      …and when I was interpreting sediment time series, from the main Amazon tributaries…

      I kept finding myself back in his literature.

      His team’s work on processes that build and erode sand bars, his distinction between flow regulated and bed regulated transport, and his careful identification of the time scales and grain sizes at play when we think about ‘supply limitation’ and disequilibrium transport have all made their way into my work and my mental model of rivers.

      You can find more of his work at these links:

      https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/david-j-topping

      https://www.usgs.gov/centers/southwest-biological-science-center/science/river-sediment-dynamics

      https://www.gcmrc.gov/discharge_qw_sediment/


      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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      1 h et 2 min
    • Rob Ettema on River Ice, Ice-Sediment Interactions, and Sediment Scientist Biographies
      Apr 17 2025

      I grew up in one of North America’s great snow belts…and started my career in Buffalo NY
      So, that background and my fascination with sediment transport primes curiosity in ice transport.
      I’m sure my ice friends would cringe at this, but I sometimes call ice transport as upside down sediment transport.

      But despite the symmetry of ice and sediment transport, they are separate, complicated, disciplines with little overlapping expertise.

      Which is why its remarkable, that this episode’s guest is not only is not only world class in both disciplines, but unquestionably the go-to global expert in how they interact.

      It is fair to say that just about everything I know about how ice effects sediment transport and river morphology, I learned from Dr. Rob Ettema

      So I wanted to have Rob on the podcast to talk about the interactions between ice and the other river processes we tend to talk about in this feed. But recognizing that maybe not everyone who listens to this podcast, is initiated into the wild world of fluvial ice dynamics, we start out with some basics of river ice-formation and transport.

      But then we not only dove into the differences between ice-affected and ice-free rivers, but also how ice affects rivers of different latitudes, depths, and even flow directions.

      Dr. Rob Ettema retired Colorado State University last year, where he has been a professor since 2015 and continues to work as a research scientist. Before that he taught (and served as Engineering Dean) at the Universities of Iowa and Wyoming.

      He has edited ASCE’s cold regions journal, and won that society’s Rouse and Einstein (2015) Awards, which is particularly apt as he has written biographical works on the scientists both of those awards are named after.

      He is well know for his work on ice and scour; the former we talked about at length and the latter we barely touched. But Dr. Ettema, is also one of those researchers, that has multiple self-contained, bodies of work, which have each influenced me enough, that I would have invited him on the podcast for either topic.

      So in the second half of the conversation, we explore Dr Ettema’s interest in the history of the hydraulic and sediment disciplines, and a genre of literature in which he is second to none: sediment science biography.

      We talk about lessons from the characters he has written about, including names like Rouse, Einstein, and Radkivi.

      This will wrap up our Colorado State trilogy.
      Kind of…we are also releasing some remarkable bonus content with this episode.

      Jennifer Bountry (Bureau of Reclamation) invited Dr. Ettema and Dr Julien down to the Bureau’s technical service center to teach a short course together. She provided the zoom footage.

      So I edited a little bit and we are releasing the whole short course on the HEC sediment Youtube channel. If you found the last two episodes interesting, we have about 8 hours, of formal technical content for you to dig into.

      We’ll link to the playlist in the episode notes and post the


      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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      56 min
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