Estimating Snow Water Equivalent Using Snow Depth Data and Climate Classes

Author:

Sturm Matthew1,Taras Brian2,Liston Glen E.3,Derksen Chris4,Jonas Tobias5,Lea Jon6

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, Ft. Wainwright, Alaska

2. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Fairbanks, Alaska

3. Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

4. Climate Research Division, Environment Canada, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

5. WSL-Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research SLF, Davos, Switzerland

6. National Resource Conservation Service, Oregon State Office, Portland, Oregon

Abstract

Abstract In many practical applications snow depth is known, but snow water equivalent (SWE) is needed as well. Measuring SWE takes ∼20 times as long as measuring depth, which in part is why depth measurements outnumber SWE measurements worldwide. Here a method of estimating snow bulk density is presented and then used to convert snow depth to SWE. The method is grounded in the fact that depth varies over a range that is many times greater than that of bulk density. Consequently, estimates derived from measured depths and modeled densities generally fall close to measured values of SWE. Knowledge of snow climate classes is used to improve the accuracy of the estimation procedure. A statistical model based on a Bayesian analysis of a set of 25 688 depth–density–SWE data collected in the United States, Canada, and Switzerland takes snow depth, day of the year, and the climate class of snow at a selected location from which it produces a local bulk density estimate. When converted to SWE and tested against two continental-scale datasets, 90% of the computed SWE values fell within ±8 cm of the measured values, with most estimates falling much closer.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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