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Snow and the ground temperature record of climate change

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Snow and the ground temperature record of climate change
Names Harris, Robert N. (creator)
Bartlett, Marshall G. (creator)
Chapman, David S. (creator)
Date Issued 2004 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract [1] Borehole temperature-depth profiles contain a record of surface ground temperature
(SGT) changes with time and complement surface air temperature (SAT) analysis to infer
climate change over multiple centuries. Ground temperatures are generally warmer than
air temperatures due to solar radiation effects in the summer and the insulating effect
of snow cover during the winter. The low thermal diffusivity of snow damps surface
temperature variations; snow effectively acts as an insulator of the ground during the
coldest part of the year. A numerical model of snow-ground thermal interactions is
developed to investigate the effect of seasonal snow cover on annual ground temperatures.
The model is parameterized in terms of three snow event parameters: onset time of the
annual snow event, duration of the event, and depth of snow during the event. These
parameters are commonly available from meteorological and remotely sensed data making
the model broadly applicable. The model is validated using SAT, subsurface temperature
from a depth of 10 cm, and snow depth data from the 6 years of observations at
Emigrant Pass climate observatory in northwestern Utah and 217 station years of
National Weather Service data from sites across North America. Measured subsurface
temperature-time series are compared to changes predicted by the model. The model
consistently predicts ground temperature changes that compare well with those observed.
Sensitivity analysis of the model leads to a nonlinear relationship between the three
snow event parameters (onset, duration, and depth of the annual snow event) and the
influence snow has on mean annual SGT.
Genre Article
Topic snow cover
Identifier Bartlett, M. G., D. S. Chapman, and R. N. Harris (2004), Snow and the ground temperature record of climate change, J. Geophys. Res., 109, F04008, doi:10.1029/2004JF000224

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