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Associate Professor David Callaghan
Associate Professor

David Callaghan

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53517

Overview

Background

Before joining the University of Queensland, Dave P. Callaghan held positions within industry including Parsons Brinckerhoff and Lawson and Treloar and research sector including Nederlands Instituut voor Ecologie and the University of Queensland. He is an observer of the Queensland Water Panel and active in the newly created Australian Hydraulic Modelling Association. He is the author of a book section and more than 50 other technical documents with applied and research applications. He is a consultant to private and government organisations. He has worked recently with private and government organisations to improve understanding of extreme coastal weather responses. He is recognised for leading edge research in coastal engineering including statistics of extremes, beach erosion from extreme events, physical and biological interactions of salt marshes and coral reefs, lagoon dynamics and wave propagation.

Availability

Associate Professor David Callaghan is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Engineering, Queensland University of Technology
  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland

Research interests

  • Coastal Engineering

    All aspects of Coastal engineering including wave growth, propagation and dissipation, sediment transport and coastal morphology, surge dynamics, extreme probabilities for coastal variables including beach erosion and oceanic inundation, surf and swash zone hydrodynamics, river entrance hydraulics and morphodynamics and coastal groundwater dynamics.

Research impacts

My research is under continued translation through Civil Engineering consulting work (coastal erosion when managing beaches under changing climate, extreme values for setting flood levels and assessing beach erosion, climate change assessments for flood hazards), Environmental Engineering consulting work (cyclone and non-cyclonic wave climates under a changing climate for the entire Great Barrier Reef, Ningaloo Reef and Jervis Bay and coral habitat mapping of the Great Barrier Reef), and through ARC linkages (Redland City Council and DHI Group), Cooperative Research Centres (Blue economy, Bushfires and natural hazards and Tourism) and National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility projects, were research was operationalised by working hand in hand with industry. My discoveries around coastal erosion and extreme values assessments are becoming the normal standard for engineering projects, particularly in NSW, which has a high wave energy coastline.

Works

Search Professor David Callaghan’s works on UQ eSpace

153 works between 2002 and 2025

121 - 140 of 153 works

2012

Conference Publication

Coastal Lagoon Entrance Management - What can models tell us?

Wainwright, D., Baldock, T. and Callaghan, D. (2012). Coastal Lagoon Entrance Management - What can models tell us?. 21st NSW Coastal Conference, Kiama, NSW, Australia, 6-9 November 2012. Australia: New South Wales Coastal Conference.

Coastal Lagoon Entrance Management - What can models tell us?

2012

Conference Publication

Inferring inlet morphodynamics and hydraulic parameters from tidal records of Avoca Lake, NSW, Australia

Vu, Thuy T. T., Nielsen, Peter, Callaghan, David P. and Nghiem, Lam T. (2012). Inferring inlet morphodynamics and hydraulic parameters from tidal records of Avoca Lake, NSW, Australia. Fourth International Conference on Estuaries and Coasts, Hanoi, Vietnam, 8-12 October 2012. Hanoi, Vietnam: Water Resources University.

Inferring inlet morphodynamics and hydraulic parameters from tidal records of Avoca Lake, NSW, Australia

2012

Conference Publication

Statistical modelling of coastal lagoon barrier height to inform coastal design and planning

Wainwright, D. J., Baldock, T. E. and Callaghan, D. P. (2012). Statistical modelling of coastal lagoon barrier height to inform coastal design and planning. Coast to Coast 2012, Brisbane, Australia, 17-21 September 2012.

Statistical modelling of coastal lagoon barrier height to inform coastal design and planning

2011

Journal Article

Transient wave behaviour over an underwater sliding hump from experiments and analytical and numerical modelling

Callaghan, David P., Ahmadi, Afshin and Nielsen, Peter (2011). Transient wave behaviour over an underwater sliding hump from experiments and analytical and numerical modelling. Experiments in Fluids: experimental methods and their applications to fluid flow, 51 (6), 1657-1671. doi: 10.1007/s00348-011-1183-2

Transient wave behaviour over an underwater sliding hump from experiments and analytical and numerical modelling

2011

Journal Article

Downward transfer of momentum by wind-driven waves

Nielsen, Peter, Callaghan, David P. and Baldock, Tom E. (2011). Downward transfer of momentum by wind-driven waves. Coastal Engineering, 58 (12), 1118-1124. doi: 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2011.06.008

Downward transfer of momentum by wind-driven waves

2011

Conference Publication

Application of the wave pump concept to simulate tidal anomalies in Lake Conjola, NSW

Vu, Thuy T.T, Nielsen, P., Callaghan, D. P. and Hanslow, D. J. (2011). Application of the wave pump concept to simulate tidal anomalies in Lake Conjola, NSW. Sixth International Conference on Asian and Pacific Coasts (APAC 2011), Hong Kong, China, 14-16 December 2011. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Company. doi: 10.1142/9789814366489_0096

Application of the wave pump concept to simulate tidal anomalies in Lake Conjola, NSW

2011

Conference Publication

Stormy wave analysis based on field observation on south-east coasts of Queensland

Jafari, Alireza, Cartwright, Nick, Nielsen, Peter and Callaghan, David (2011). Stormy wave analysis based on field observation on south-east coasts of Queensland. 34th IAHR World Congress, 33rd Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium and 10th Conference on Hydraulics in Water Engineering, Brisbane, Qld, Australia, 26 June-1 July 2011. Brisbane, Australia: Engineers Australia.

Stormy wave analysis based on field observation on south-east coasts of Queensland

2011

Journal Article

Flow interaction with dynamic vegetation patches: Implications for biogeomorphic evolution of a tidal landscape

Vandenbruwaene, W., Temmerman, S., Bouma, T.J., Klaassen, P.C., De Vries, M.B., Callaghan, D.P., Van Steeg, P., Dekker, F., Van Duren, L. A., Martini, E., Balke, T., Biermans, G., Schoelynck, J. and Meire, P. (2011). Flow interaction with dynamic vegetation patches: Implications for biogeomorphic evolution of a tidal landscape. Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface, 116 (F1) F01008, n/a-n/a. doi: 10.1029/2010JF001788

Flow interaction with dynamic vegetation patches: Implications for biogeomorphic evolution of a tidal landscape

2011

Conference Publication

Storm surge estimates using wind stress coefficients determined from wind-wave growth observations

Callaghan David P., Stewart, Jared, Nielsen, Peter and Baldock, Tom E. (2011). Storm surge estimates using wind stress coefficients determined from wind-wave growth observations. 20th Australasian Coastal and Ocean Engineering Conference and the 13th Australasian Port and Harbour Conference, Perth, Australia, 28-30 September 2011. Nedlands, W.A., Australia: The University of Western Australia.

Storm surge estimates using wind stress coefficients determined from wind-wave growth observations

2011

Journal Article

A risk-informed approach to coastal zone management

Jongejan, R.B., Ranasinghe, R., Vrijling, J.K. and Callaghan, D. (2011). A risk-informed approach to coastal zone management. Australian Journal of Civil Engineering, 9 (1), 47-60. doi: 10.1080/14488353.2011.11463968

A risk-informed approach to coastal zone management

2010

Journal Article

Hydrodynamic forcing on salt-marsh development: Distinguishing the relative importance of waves and tidal flows

Callaghan, D. P., Bouma, T. J., Klaassen, P., van der Wal, D., Stive, M. J. F. and Herman, P. M. J. (2010). Hydrodynamic forcing on salt-marsh development: Distinguishing the relative importance of waves and tidal flows. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 89 (1), 73-88. doi: 10.1016/j.ecss.2010.05.013

Hydrodynamic forcing on salt-marsh development: Distinguishing the relative importance of waves and tidal flows

2010

Other Outputs

Tropical cyclone 'Roger' storm surge assessment

Stewart, Jared, Callaghan, David and Nielsen, Peter (2010). Tropical cyclone 'Roger' storm surge assessment. Civil Engineering Research Reports Brisbane, Australia: School of Civil Engineering, The University of Queensland. doi: 10.14264/210173

Tropical cyclone 'Roger' storm surge assessment

2010

Conference Publication

Gold Coast Seaway: ocean surface, wave setup and TC Roger

Stewart, Jared, Callaghan, David and Shabani, Behnam (2010). Gold Coast Seaway: ocean surface, wave setup and TC Roger. The Australian Wind-Waves Research Science Symposium 2010, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia, 19-20 May, 2010. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research, CSIRO.

Gold Coast Seaway: ocean surface, wave setup and TC Roger

2009

Conference Publication

Probabilistic modelling of coastal recession due to sea level rise

Ranasinghe, R., Callaghan, D. and Stive, M. J. F. (2009). Probabilistic modelling of coastal recession due to sea level rise. 19th Australasian Coastal and Ocean Engineering Conference 2009, COASTS 2009 and the 12th Australasian Port and Harbour Conference 2009, PORTS 2009, Wellington, 16-18 September 2009. Red Hook, NY United States: Curran Associates, Inc..

Probabilistic modelling of coastal recession due to sea level rise

2009

Conference Publication

A process based approach to derive probabilistic estimates of coastal recession due to sea level rise

Ranasinghe, Roshanka, David Callaghan and Stive, Marcel J. F. (2009). A process based approach to derive probabilistic estimates of coastal recession due to sea level rise. 6th International Conference on Coastal Dynamics, Tokyo, Japan, 7-11 September 2009. Singapore: World Scientific. doi: 10.1142/9789814282475_0133

A process based approach to derive probabilistic estimates of coastal recession due to sea level rise

2009

Conference Publication

Process-determined coastal erosion hazards

Callaghan D., Ranasinghe R., Nielsen P., Larson M. and Short A. (2009). Process-determined coastal erosion hazards. 31st International Conference on Coastal Engineering, ICCE 2008, Hamburg, 31 August-5 September 2008. Reston, VA United States: American Society of Civil Engineers. doi: 10.1142/9789814277426_0351

Process-determined coastal erosion hazards

2009

Journal Article

Quantifying the storm erosion hazard for coastal planning

Callaghan, David P., Ranasinghe, Roshanka and Short, Andrew (2009). Quantifying the storm erosion hazard for coastal planning. Coastal Engineering, 56 (1), 90-93. doi: 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2008.10.003

Quantifying the storm erosion hazard for coastal planning

2008

Journal Article

Transient dynamics of storm surges and other forced long waves

Nielsen, P., Sebastien de Brye, Callaghan, D. and Guard, P. (2008). Transient dynamics of storm surges and other forced long waves. Coastal Engineering, 55 (6), 499-505. doi: 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2008.02.006

Transient dynamics of storm surges and other forced long waves

2008

Journal Article

Observations of wave pump efficiency

Nielsen, Peter, Guard, Paul A., Callaghan, David P. and Baldock, Tom E. (2008). Observations of wave pump efficiency. Coastal Engineering, 55 (1), 69-72. doi: 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2007.07.003

Observations of wave pump efficiency

2007

Journal Article

Estimating extreme beach erosion frequency from a Monte Carlo simulation of wave climate

Callaghan, D. P., Nielsen, P. and Ranasinghe, R. (2007). Estimating extreme beach erosion frequency from a Monte Carlo simulation of wave climate. Journal of Coastal Research, 2007 (Special Issue 50), 88-92.

Estimating extreme beach erosion frequency from a Monte Carlo simulation of wave climate

Funding

Current funding

  • 2022 - 2025
    NSW regional-scale flood hazard projections under climate change
    New South Wales Department of Planning and Environment
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2025
    RRAP-RS-01-V1 Rubble location, prediction and sub-program management (GBRF funding administered by AIMS)
    Australian Institute of Marine Science
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2025
    RRAP-RS-02-V1 Approaches to stabilisation
    Australian Institute of Marine Science
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2025
    RRAP-RS-03-V1 Synthesis and Tools Rubble Stabilisation
    Australian Institute of Marine Science
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2021 - 2024
    Managing the existing and emerging threats from coastal flow slides
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2019 - 2023
    Next generation offshore blue water aquaculture
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2022
    Understanding reservoir sedimentation
    UniQuest Pty Ltd
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2018
    Coastal Engineering Research Field Station (CERFS) (ARC LIEF project administered by Griffith University)
    Griffith University
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2018
    Resilience to clustered disaster events on the coast - storm surge
    Commonwealth Government Geoscience Australia
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2015
    Healthy Waterways model custodian
    Healthy Waterways Ltd
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    North West Channel Trial Dredging Project
    UniQuest Pty Ltd
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    Assessing and enhancing the resilience of Australian beaches to sea level rise.
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2015
    Development and validation of an innovative wind stress model to obtain robust storm surge forecasts
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2014
    Seagrass as an ecological indicator: resolving challenges of scale and complexity
    UQ Collaboration and Industry Engagement Fund
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2016
    Optimising SWRO Concentrate Discharge During 'Hot Standby' Operation
    Murdoch University
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2013
    A model framework for assessing risk and adaptation to climate change on Australian coasts
    University of Wollongong
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2013
    Development of an adaptive statistical model for oceanic flooding hazards along the East Australian coast
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2010
    Near-bed wave kinetics
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Associate Professor David Callaghan is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Amity Point Flow Slides: overcoming their impacts on infrastructure in a changing climate

    For more information, please email dave.callaghan@uq.edu.au

    We have been granted ARC (Australian Research Council) funding to investigate the flow slides and the associated erosion hazard at three levels, with likely, formal start around January 2021. It is a three pronged study with study opportunities for at least 3 PhD students. The three prongs of the study are:

    1. 2DV investigation of the vertical retreating flow slide (dilative slope failure).
    2. The formation and recovery of the erosion embayments, which typically get to a diameter of the order 50m in plan.
    3. The longer term, years to decades, development of the shoals in the channel between Nth Stradbroke and Moreton Islands in order to asses worsening versus easing of the erosion threat to the Amity point area at the planning time scale.

    1. 2DV Investigation into the vertical retreating sand faces

    Vertical retreating sand faces have been observed in nature triggered either by natural processes or dredgers. A number of details are unresolved and worthy of investigation, eg, triggering, development of a vertical face, criteria for maintaining the turbidity current.

    2. Intermediate scale investigation

    For more information, please email dave.callaghan@uq.edu.au

    Flow slide events usually leave a semi-circular indentation of the shoreline with diameter of the order 50m. It is not well understood why this is, ie, why not a more or less straight erosion front between hard boundaries? Similarly, it is surprising that, these ‘erosion bays’ are often filled back in by the natural sediment transport processes in a matter of only a couple of weeks. The ability to prevent or mitigate the erosion events would be of obvious benefit to coastal managers. So, that is the goal of our proposed investigations at these intermediate scales. This investigation will combine monitoring with down-looking cameras, and profile surveying with numerical sediment transport modelling.

    3. Large scale morphodynamic modelling

    The question: “is the erosion threat at Amity Point going to intensify or ease off over the next decade” is at the centre of this investigation. The answer is tied to the developments of the largescale channels and sandbanks between Amity Point and the southern tip off Moreton island. Hence a numerical hydraulics and sediment transport model is the large scale part of this project.

  • Moving fish farms offshore into the Southern Ocean: Is it possible?

    For more information, please email dave.callaghan@uq.edu.au

    There are many pressures on fish farms for moving offshore from pollution through to production. And in Australia, given our location, that means shifting into the Southern Ocean, possibility the most active ocean basin on planet earth and a region with no significant existing installations.

    This research aims to estimate wave and fluid motion forcing on a range of fish farming infrastructure to test if there are operational windows and techniques available. This research will occur in parallel with two other projects that focus on the fluid/structure interactions. This research is part of an ARC (Australian Research Council) funded project.

    It is expected that successful applicant would also become part of the CRC Blue Economy.

  • Storm Surge dynamics within the surfzone during cyclonic conditions

    For more information, please email dave.callaghan@uq.edu.au

    We have been granted ARC (Australian Research Council) funds and have established permanent facilities to measure cross-shore water level (to cm accuracy) using tubes, lasers and cameras. This provides information that allows the unpacking of why observed surges at this site are between two and three times that predicted using current technology. The project would involve three phases, laboratory experiments that mirror the field site, field measurements during either tropical or ex-tropical cyclone conditions or east coast low (usually one major event annually) and analytical extensions to existing numerical models to incorporate the new process understanding.

  • Wind wave climate estimations under a uncertain future climate

    For more information, please email dave.callaghan@uq.edu.au

    Queensland, Australia, home of the Great Barrier Reef and beaches, which forms the foundation of the tourism industry, is exposed to annual tropical cyclones. These extreme weather events have a wide range of impacts on this industry from coral and beach damage and flooding. As the climate changes, it is expected that tropical cyclones will also change and that has several authority’s activity working on mitigation and resilience works. These tasks require estimations of wave climates during a changing climate, with significant uncertainties. Consequently, this project seeks to understanding the propagation of uncertainty in wind wave modelling from tropical cyclones that are moving through the Great Barrier Reef.

    Spatial and temporal scales of forcing uncertainty, as tropical cyclones move through coastal waters within the GBR, vary significantly. This is qualitatively different to previous work in which spatial scales over which forcing is applied was similar to metrological system applying it. Within the GBR, there are a range of spatial scales at play, from a few kilometres to hundreds of kilometres. Similarly, there are slow- and fast-moving tropical cyclone events, thus varying the temporal scale. This project will unpack those influences and develop approaches to include them efficiently when estimating wave climates generally. Those approaches will be tested on the Great Barrier Reef as an exemplar.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Coral Reef Hydrodynamics and Coral Rubble Dynamics--Project 2 (RS-003a)

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Tom Baldock, Dr Daniel Harris

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Long Term Coastal Morophology Modelling of Rainbow Channel, Moreton Bay

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Peter Nielsen

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Coral Reef Hydrodynamics and Coral Rubble Dynamics--Project 2 (RS-003a)

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Tom Baldock, Dr Daniel Harris

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Amity Point Flow Slides: Intermediate scale investigations

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Peter Nielsen

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Towards a coral rubble instability model to inform coral remediation within the Great Barrier Reef

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Tom Baldock, Dr Daniel Harris

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Development, Testing and Numerical Modelling of a Buoyant Parabolic Beach as an Efficient Floating Breakwater

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Tom Baldock

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Hydrodynamics forces and mobility of coral rubble

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Daniel Harris, Professor Tom Baldock

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Hydrodynamics forces and mobility of coral rubble

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Daniel Harris, Professor Tom Baldock

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Assessing and modelling of breaching and coastal erosion risks on Bribie Island and the Sunshine Coast under current and future wave climates.

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Remo Cossu, Professor Tom Baldock

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Offshore seaweed and renewable energy farms: solutions for integration and co-location

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Chien Ming Wang

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Hydrodynamics forces and mobility of coral rubble

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Daniel Harris, Professor Tom Baldock

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Examination of the performance of XBeach numerical model for beaches on open coasts and behind coral reefs using laboratory, field and aerial imaging data

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Tom Baldock

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Structural and hydrodynamic analysis of the breakage of coral colonies and rubble motion

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Daniel Harris, Professor Tom Baldock

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Impacts of climate change-induced large-scale disturbances on coral reef connectivity and recovery

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Peter Mumby

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Examination of the performance of XBeach numerical model for beaches on open coasts and behind coral reefs using laboratory, field and aerial imaging data

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Tom Baldock

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Coastal erosion when managing beaches under changing climate

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Peter Nielsen

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Associate Professor David Callaghan directly for media enquiries about:

  • beach ersion
  • coastal engineering
  • fluid mechanics
  • storm surge
  • wave modelling

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