Research Frontiers
Synthesized boundaries between what scientists know and what they don't, with identifiable paths to push the boundary forward. Each frontier is built from atomic gap-statements extracted across the research neighborhoods of the RMBL Knowledge Fabric, then clustered by semantic similarity and synthesized into a coherent narrative.
7 of 98 frontiers · Snow & Ice
Forest Disturbance Signals and Drinking Water Treatability
Bridges forest disturbance ecology, aquatic organic matter biogeochemistry, and drinking water engineering — a bridge that matters because regulatory compliance at the treatment plant is being driven by landscape processes upstream that no single discipline currently characterizes end-to-end.
Cloud, Aerosol, and Radiative Controls on Mountain Snowpack
Bridges atmospheric chemistry, cloud microphysics, snow hydrology, and operational water forecasting because runoff prediction in the Colorado headwaters depends on processes that no single discipline currently resolves.
Compound Disturbance Effects on Mountain Watershed Function
Bridges catchment hydrology, plant ecophysiology, biogeochemistry, and beaver-driven geomorphology because compound climate disturbance cannot be predicted from any single discipline's models.
Transferability of Watershed Functional Zonation Schemes
Bridges remote sensing, near-surface geophysics, and distributed ecohydrological modeling, because portable watershed classification is the linchpin connecting site-intensive Critical Zone science to regional water prediction.
Predicting Subsurface Structure From Surface Observations
Bridges geophysics, remote sensing, pedology, and watershed hydrology because subsurface structure is the hidden parameter that ties surface observations to deep critical-zone function.
Warm-Season Monsoon Precipitation Bias in Mountain Climate Models
Bridges atmospheric science, cloud microphysics, mountain hydrology, and basin-scale water management by demanding that process-level observations and convection-permitting models be evaluated against each other rather than in parallel.
Sublimation and Microclimate Controls on Mountain Water Balance
The boundary bridges snow hydrology, boundary-layer meteorology, and terrain microclimatology because mountain water yield cannot be predicted without resolving how all three interact at sub-kilometer scales.