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Dawdy, David R

Key results in the last 20 years have established the theoretical and observational foundations for developing a new nonlinear geophysical theory of floods in river basins. This theory, henceforth called the scaling theory, has the explicit goal to link the physics of runoff generating processes with spatial power-law statistical relations between floods and drainage areas across multiple scales of space and time. Published results have shown that the spatial power law statistical relations emerge asymptotically from conservation equations and physical processes as drainage area goes to infinity. These results have led to a key hypothesis that the physical basis of power laws in floods has its origin in the self-similarity...
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