2005 Fall Meeting          
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Cite abstracts as Author(s) (2005), Title, Eos Trans. AGU,
86
(52), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract xxxxx-xx

 

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an="C21A-1061"


HR: 0800h
AN: C21A-1061
TI: Topographic Distribution of Snow-Covered Area in the Sierra Nevada
AU: * Rittger, K
EM: krittger@bren.ucsb.edu
AF: University of California, Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-5131 United States
AU: Dozier, J
EM: dozier@bren.ucsb.edu
AF: University of California, Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-5131 United States
AB: Melting snow is the principal source of water supplies in the western US. Historical ground measurements in the Sierra Nevada seem to show a trend toward decreasing spring snow water equivalence at lower-elevation sites, particularly at more southern latitudes. Remotely sensed measurements of snow-covered area from Landsat augment these ground-based snow accumulation data. Overlaying the Landsat measurements with topographic data from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) enables us to examine the relationship between snow-covered area and topographic variables--elevation, slope, and orientation--and to analyze systematic differences between a "binary" snow mapping method that categorizes every grid cell as either snow-covered or bare and a "subpixel" method that estimates the fraction of every grid cell that is snow-covered. Snow-covered area and snow-cover fraction increase with elevation, and analysis of selected basins reveals that slopes with a western orientation have more snow covered area than those of eastern orientation. Moreover, analyses of snow-covered area in basins with varying elevation distributions show that the binary method systematically underestimates snow at lower elevations and overestimates snow at higher elevations.
UR: http://www.snow.ucsb.edu/
DE: 0736 Snow (1827, 1863)
DE: 0758 Remote sensing
SC: Cryosphere [C]
MN: Fall Meeting 2005


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