← Leaderboards
Ryan E Emanuel
Appalachian State University
$1,882,142
Attributed
$2,216,589
Total exposure
12
Grants
10
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants.
Funding over time
peak $613.3K · FY2009–22$1M$750K$500K$250K$0
'09
'10
'11
'12
'13
'14
'15
'16
'17
'18
'19
'20
'21
'22
Funding mix
By agency
NSF$2,216,589 · 12
By mechanism
—$2,216,589 · 12
Top collaborators
- Angela Harris1 shared
- Brett F Taubman1 shared
- Elizabeth G Nichols1 shared
- Howard S Neufeld1 shared
- James P Sherman1 shared
- Joshua Kearns1 shared
- Joshua M Gray1 shared
- Karletta Chief1 shared
Grant awards (12)
Collaborative Research: Quantifying the amount and functional significance of long-term stored-water in trees$171,554
· FY2022 · BIO · contact PI
Collaborative Research: Quantifying the amount and functional significance of long-term stored-water in trees$343,244
· FY2020 · BIO · contact PI
RAPID: Collaborative Research: Assessing chemical and microbiological contamination in environmental waters in Eastern North Carolina after Hurricane Florence$99,694
· FY2018 · ENG
A Symposium on Indigenous Water Knowledge and Hydrologic Science$99,759
· FY2017 · GEO
Landscape controls on hydrologic responses to long-term climate oscillations$214,952
· FY2016 · GEO · contact PI
RAPID: Collaborative Research: Impacts of Extreme Flooding on Hydrologic Connectivity and Water Quality in the Atlantic Coastal Plain and Implications for Vulnerable Populations$29,023
· FY2016 · GEO · contact PI
Coastal SEES Collaborative Research: Salinization of the Coastal Plain through Saltwater Intrusion - Landscapes in Transition along the Leading Edge of Climate Change$360,393
· FY2015 · BIO · contact PI
Early Career: Technician Support for a Field-Based Research Program in Ecohydrology$252,899
· FY2015 · GEO · contact PI
Acquisition of a Mobile Tower System for Interdisciplinary Atmospheric Research$191,397
· FY2011 · GEO · contact PI
RIG: Assessment of Secondary Succession in North Carolina: Advancing understanding of successional vegetation through coupled field and remote sensing studies$107,801
· FY2010 · BIO · contact PI
RIG: Assessment of Secondary Succession in North Carolina: Advancing understanding of successional vegetation through coupled field and remote sensing studies$199,938
· FY2009 · BIO · contact PI
COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: The intersection of vegetation organization and watershed topology: Ecohydrologic imprints in runoff generation and stream discharge$145,935
· FY2009 · GEO · contact PI