Inicio  /  Hydrology  /  Vol: 3 Par: 1 (2016)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Spatial Heterogeneity of Snow Density and Its Influence on Snow Water Equivalence Estimates in a Large Mountainous Basin

Karl Wetlaufer    
Jordy Hendrikx and Lucy Marshall    

Resumen

Accurate representation of the spatial distribution of snow water equivalent (SWE) in mountainous basins is critical for furthering the understanding of snow as a water resource, especially in the Western United States. To estimate the spatial distribution and total volume of SWE over mountainous basins, previous work has either assumed uniform snow density or used simple approaches to estimate density. This study uses over 1000 direct measurements of SWE and snow depth (from which density was calculated) in sampling areas that were physiographically proportional to a large (207 km2) mountainous basin in southwest Montana. Using these data, modeled spatial distributions of density and depth were developed and combined to obtain estimates of total basin SWE. Six estimates of SWE were obtained using varying combinations of the distributed depth and density models and were compared to the average of three different models that utilized direct measurements of SWE. Models utilizing direct SWE measurements varied by approximately 1% around their mean, while SWE estimates derived from combined depth and density models varied by over 14% around the same mean. This study highlights the need to carefully consider the spatial variability of density when estimating SWE based on snow depth in these environments.

Palabras claves

 Artículos similares

       
 
Chiara Corbari, Giovanni Ravazzani, Alessandro Perotto, Giulio Lanzingher, Gabriele Lombardi, Matteo Quadrio, Marco Mancini and Raffaele Salerno    
This paper presents a system for supporting hydropower production on mountainous areas. The system couples the outputs of a numerical weather prediction model and a snow melting and accumulation temperature-based model. Several procedures are presented f... ver más
Revista: Hydrology

 
Soroush Zarghami Dastjerdi, Ehsan Sharifi, Rozita Rahbar and Bahram Saghafian    
Climate change, urbanization, and a growing population have led to a rapid increase in groundwater (GW) use. As a result, monitoring groundwater changes is essential for water managers and decision-makers. Due to the lack of reliable and insufficient in ... ver más
Revista: Hydrology

 
Hadis Pakdel-Khasmakhi, Majid Vazifedoust, Dev Raj Paudyal, Sreeni Chadalavada and Md Jahangir Alam    
Understanding the effects of global change and human activities on water supplies depends greatly on surface water dynamics. A comprehensive examination of the hydroclimatic variations at the transboundary level is essential for the development of any ad... ver más

 
Isaac J. Y. Schrock, Steven R. Fassnacht, Antonio-Juan Collados-Lara, William E. Sanford, Anna K. D. Pfohl and Enrique Morán-Tejeda    
The spatial characteristics and patterns of snow accumulation and ablation inform the amount of water stored and subsequently available for runoff and the timing of snowmelt. This paper characterizes the snow accumulation phase to investigate the spatiot... ver más
Revista: Hydrology

 
Kai Zheng, Jiansheng Li, Lei Ding, Jianfeng Yang, Xucheng Zhang and Xun Zhang    
The segmentation of cloud and snow in satellite images is a key step for subsequent image analysis, interpretation, and other applications. In this paper, a cloud and snow segmentation method based on a deep convolutional neural network (DCNN) with enhan... ver más