You found us. When we're not out stomping around hollers, hiking glacial moraine crests, or rafting rivers, you might find us here at Possum-Trot, South Carolina doing unbearably interesting things. Yep, like reducing global water resource vulnerabilities to grids (Shama Perveen, PhD 2008), computing rates of river migration (Subhajit Ghoshal, PhD 2011), comparing 1909 maps with LiDAR data (Mary Megison, MS 2008) stomping gullies (Darrell Watsen), counting sand grains under the microscope (Amanda Newbold), actually graduating from college and getting a real job (Joe Touzel) or finishing the river thesis and getting a job (Tanner Arrington), restoring urban streams (John Wooten, MS 2008), or generally goofing off (AJ, etc.).
And as near as I can tell, Kevin MacLeod (MS 2012) is still spaced out; that is, doing spatial modeling, Brett Sexton (MS 2014) is STILL working on Rocky Branch Creek, Parker Leslie (2016) is goofing off at Possum-trot Beach, Tyler Dearman (MS in progress) is going to great lengths on his thesis fieldwork in Fairfield County, Chen-Ling (i.e., Jenny) Hung , ABD, PhD is looking at the LiDAR side of hydrologic modeling, and Alex Butler (MS in progress) is studying water up close. Moreover, Logan Ress (MS in progress) is studying hydrology (I think she gets Basil to help with the work), and Jack Williams (MS in progress) is SWMMing (urban storm-water modeling).
Brett Sexton (MS, 2014) Parker Leslie (MS, 2016)
Tyler Dearman, MS in progress Chen-Ling Hung, ABD; PhD in progress, right: Mississippi River
Alex Butler, MS in progress Logan Ress (with Basil), MS in progress
Jack Williams, MS in progress
So sad the sequel is to tell:
they mined the mountains all to hell,
cut the forests to the stone,
and plowed the soils to the bone,
and when the rivers filled with earth
the floods did rise and spread their girth.
-Howling Sawtooth, 2016
All seriousness aside...