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Dive into the research topics where Cleo Woelfle-Erskine is active.

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Featured researches published by Cleo Woelfle-Erskine.


Water Resources Research | 2017

Measuring household consumption and waste in unmetered, intermittent piped water systems

Emily Kumpel; Cleo Woelfle-Erskine; Isha Ray; Kara L. Nelson

Author(s): Kumpel, E; Woelfle-Erskine, C; Ray, I; Nelson, KL | Abstract:


Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience | 2017

The watershed body: Transgressing frontiers in riverine sciences, planning stochastic multispecies worlds

Cleo Woelfle-Erskine

In conversation with Eva Hayward’s writing on transgender embodiment, this paper explores how beaver modify landscapes differently than human engineers, and how human engineering might be transformed through riverine collaborations with beavers. Considering the body variously as a body of water — a river, which draws together all of the above and underground water in a watershed — as like our own trans bodies, and as a slippery double for the psyche of an Anthropocene engineer, July Cole and I argued that thinking with beaver as stochastic transgressors against Manifest Destiny engineering projects could transfigure engineers approaches to their work and river restoration more broadly. What if, rather than trapping beavers into service as “ecosystem engineers,” we assert that humans should engineer as beavers do, in ways that create porous boundaries between land and water and up- and downstream, by way of stick-and-mud, leaky, temporary dams? Here, I theorize a transfigured watershed body through human-beaver-salmon encounters at three salmon recovery sites in the Pacific west: a Karuk-led project on the Klamath river, agency-led beaver relocation projects in the Methow and Yakima watershed, and a citizen science-agency collaborative project in the beaverless Salmon Creek and Russian River watersheds. All three stories concern river and salmon recovery in the Pacific West, where either humans or beavers have initiated collaborative projects to raise water tables, keep rivers from going dry, and improve salmon habitat. These scientists and local knowledge holders’ encounters with beavers and their ponds thick with salmon are inspiring them to change how they undertake habitat restoration projects and also spurring some to reconsider the proper task of human ecologists and engineers, into a mode inspired by beavers themselves.


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2012

Combining historical and process perspectives to infer ranges of geomorphic variability and inform river restoration in a wandering gravel‐bed river

Cleo Woelfle-Erskine; Andrew C. Wilcox; Johnnie N. Moore


Ecosphere | 2017

Abiotic habitat thresholds for salmonid over‐summer survival in intermittent streams

Cleo Woelfle-Erskine; Laurel G. Larsen; Stephanie M. Carlson


TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly | 2015

Transfiguring the Anthropocene Stochastic Reimaginings of Human-Beaver Worlds

Cleo Woelfle-Erskine; July Oskar Cole


Local Environment | 2015

Thinking with salmon about rain tanks: commons as intra-actions

Cleo Woelfle-Erskine


Water | 2017

Collaborative Approaches to Flow Restoration in Intermittent Salmon-Bearing Streams: Salmon Creek, CA, USA

Cleo Woelfle-Erskine


Cogeneration & Distributed Generation Journal | 2007

Dam Nation: Dispatches from The Water Underground

Cleo Woelfle-Erskine; Laura Allen; July Oskar Cole


Water Resources Research | 2017

Measuring household consumption and waste in unmetered, intermittent piped water systems: WATER USE IN INTERMITTENT PIPED SYSTEMS

Emily Kumpel; Cleo Woelfle-Erskine; Isha Ray; Kara L. Nelson


ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies | 2015

Rain Tanks, Springs, and Broken Pipes As Emerging Water Commons Along Salmon Creek, CA, USA

Cleo Woelfle-Erskine

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Emily Kumpel

University of California

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Isha Ray

University of California

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Kara L. Nelson

University of California

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