Archive for the ‘research paper’ Category

Shi, M. and Shiraiwa, T. (2023) Estimating future streamflow under climate and land use change conditions in northeastern Hokkaido, Japan. Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies. 50, December 2023, 101555, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrh.2023.101555

Tashiro, Y., Yoh, M., Shesterkin, V.P., Shiraiwa, T., Onishi, T. and Naito, D. (2023) Permafrost wetlands are sources of dissolved iron and dissolved organic carbon to the Amur-mid rivers in summer. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 128, e2023JG007481. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JG007481

東京書籍が発行する高校社会の教育情報誌 ニューサポート高校「社会」vol.39(2023年春号)に、「安定地域の大地形」というコラムを書かせていただきました。

S. Fukumoto, S. Sugiyama, S. Hata, J. Saito, T. Shiraiwa and H. Mitsudera (2022) Glacier mass change on the Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia, from 2000 to 2016, Journal of Glaciology, pp. 1 – 14
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2022.50

東京書籍が発行する高校社会の教育情報誌 ニューサポート高校「社会」vol.37(2022年春号)に、「大地形と資源:石油はどこでとれるのか?」というコラムを書かせていただきました。

東京書籍が発行する高校社会の教育情報誌 ニューサポート高校「社会」vol.36(2021年秋号)に、「地理用語としての造山帯の退場」というコラムを書かせていただきました。

Shi, M., Shiraiwa, T., Mitsudera, H. and Muravyev, Y. (2021) Estimation of freshwater discharge from the Kamchatka Peninsula to its surrounding oceans. Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies, 36, August 2021, 100836, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrh.2021.100836

Tashiro, Y., Yoh, M., Shiraiwa, T., Onishi, T., Shesterkin, V. and Kim, V. (2020) Seasonal Variations of Dissolved Iron Concentration in Active Layer and Rivers in Permafrost Areas, Russian Far East, Water 2020, 12(9), 2579; https://doi.org/10.3390/w12092579

Onishi, T. and Shiraiwa, T. (2020) Land and ocean connection through iron transport by rivers -the case of the Amur-Okhotsk ecosystem (Giant Fish-Breeding Forest). In Nagothu, U.S.(ed.) The Bioeconomy Approach-constrains and opportunities for sustainable development-, Routledge, 45-64.

Pokhrel, A., Kawamura, K., Kunwar, B., Ono, K., Tsushima, A., Seki, O., Matoba, S. and Shiraiwa, T. (2020) Ice core records of leveglucosan and dehydroabietic and vanillin acids from Aurora Peak in Alaska since the 1660s: a proxy signal of biomass-burning activities in the Northern Pacific Rim, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 20, 597-612.