Synoptic Analysis and WRF‐Chem Model Simulation of Dust Events in the Southwestern United States

Author:

Dhital Saroj1ORCID,Webb Nicholas P.1ORCID,Chappell Adrian2ORCID,Kaplan Michael L.3ORCID,Nauman Travis W.4,Tyree Gayle5,Duniway Michael C.5ORCID,Edwards Brandon1ORCID,LeGrand Sandra L.6ORCID,Letcher Theodore W.7,McKenzie Skiles S.8ORCID,Naple Patrick8,Chaney Nathaniel W.9ORCID,Cai Jiaxuan9

Affiliation:

1. USDA‐ARS Jornada Experimental Range Las Cruces NM USA

2. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences Cardiff University Cardiff UK

3. Division of Atmospheric Sciences Desert Research Institute Reno NV USA

4. USDA‐NRCS National Soil Survey Center Lincoln NE USA

5. U.S. Geological Survey, Southwest Biological Science Center Moab UT USA

6. U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center Geospatial Research Laboratory Alexandria VA USA

7. U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory Hanover NH USA

8. Department of Geography University of Utah Salt Lake City UT USA

9. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Duke University Durham NC USA

Abstract

AbstractDust transported from rangelands of the Southwestern United States (US) to mountain snowpack in the Upper Colorado River Basin during spring (March‐May) forces earlier and faster snowmelt, which creates problems for water resources and agriculture. To better understand the drivers of dust events, we investigated large‐scale meteorology responsible for organizing two Southwest US dust events from two different dominant geographic locations: (a) the Colorado Plateau and (b) the northern Chihuahuan Desert. High‐resolution Weather Research and Forecasting coupled with Chemistry model (WRF‐Chem) simulations with the Air Force Weather Agency dust emission scheme incorporating a MODIS albedo‐based drag‐partition was used to explore land surface‐atmosphere interactions driving two dust events. We identified commonalities in their meteorological setups. The meteorological analyses revealed that Polar and Sub‐tropical jet stream interaction was a common upper‐level meteorological feature before each of the two dust events. When the two jet streams merged, a strong northeast‐directed pressure gradient upstream and over the source areas resulted in strong near‐surface winds, which lifted available dust into the atmosphere. Concurrently, a strong mid‐tropospheric flow developed over the dust source areas, which transported dust to the San Juan Mountains and southern Colorado snowpack. The WRF‐Chem simulations reproduced both dust events, indicating that the simulations represented the dust sources that contributed to dust‐on‐snow events reasonably well. The representativeness of the simulated dust emission and transport in different geographic and meteorological conditions with our use of albedo‐based drag partition provides a basis for additional dust‐on‐snow simulations to assess the hydrologic impact in the Southwest US.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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