Abstract
Abstract. The snow data from the Soviet airborne expeditions Sever in the
Arctic collected over several decades in March, April and May have been
analyzed in this study. The Sever data included more measurements and covered
a much wider area, particularly in the Eurasian marginal seas (Kara Sea,
Laptev Sea, East Siberian Sea and Chukchi Sea), compared to the Soviet North
Pole drifting stations. The latter collected data mainly in the central part
of the Arctic Basin. The following snow parameters have been analyzed:
average snow depth on the level ice (undisturbed snow) height and area of
sastrugi, depth of snow dunes attached to ice ridges and depth of snow on
hummocks. In the 1970s–1980s, in the central Arctic, the average depth of
undisturbed snow was 21.2 cm, the depth of sastrugi (that occupied about
30 % of the ice surface) was 36.2 cm and the average depth of snow near
hummocks and ridges was about 65 cm. For the marginal seas, the average depth
of undisturbed snow on the level ice varied from 9.8 cm in the Laptev Sea to
15.3 cm in the East Siberian Sea, which had a larger fraction of multiyear
ice. In the marginal seas the spatial variability of snow depth was
characterized by standard deviation varying between 66 and 100 %. The
average height of sastrugi varied from 23 cm to about 32 cm with standard
deviation between 50 and 56 %. The average area covered by sastrugi in
the marginal seas was estimated to be 36.5 % of the total ice area where
sastrugi were observed. The main result of the study is a new snow depth
climatology for the late winter using data from both the Sever expeditions
and the North Pole drifting stations. The snow load on the ice observed by
Sever expeditions has been described as a combination of the depth of
undisturbed snow on the level ice and snow depth of sastrugi weighted in
proportion to the sastrugi area. The height of snow accumulated near the ice
ridges was not included in the calculations because there are no estimates of
the area covered by those features from the Sever expeditions. The effect of
not including that data can lead to some underestimation of the average snow
depth. The new climatology refines the description of snow depth in the
central Arctic compared to the results by Warren et al. (1999) and provides
additional detailed data in the marginal seas. The snow depth climatology is
based on 94 % Sever data and 6 % North Pole data. The new climatology
shows lower snow depth in the central Arctic comparing to Warren climatology
and more detailed data in the Eurasian seas.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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