TkJTANY different flow cases with nominally twolYJLdimensional turbulent separated flow regions are discussed in Refs. 1 and 2. Because intermittent flow reversal and backflow occur in the near-wall region, directionally sensitive measurement techniques must be used to examine the flow structure. The experimentally-observed structure of detached flows on streamlined surfaces and around sharp-edged corners is discussed in detail for steady and unsteady incompressible and compressible cases. In all cases, large-scale structures dominate the flow behavior, producing large shearing stresses in the middle of the detached shear flow and strongly influencing the local intermittent backflow. The turbulence structure strongly lags the mean flow behavior in the detachment and reattachment processes. For unsteady periodic separation, there is considerable hysteresis of the flow during a cycle. A number of differential and integral calculation methods are discussed. Traditional attached flow turbulence models and correlations do not describe detached flows well. Methods that include experimentally-observed features and/or correlations of detached flow parameters seem to perform best, although further improvements are still needed.