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Snow effect on North American ground temperatures, 1950-2002

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Title Snow effect on North American ground temperatures, 1950-2002
Names Bartlett, Marshall G. (creator)
Chapman, David S. (creator)
Harris, Robert N. (creator)
Date Issued 2005-08-26 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Changes in snow’s influence on surface ground temperature (SGT) could create a bias
in the borehole temperature record of climate change. Using a snow-ground thermal model
which predicts changes in the mean annual offset between SGT and surface air
temperature (SAT), we calculate the response of SGT to changes in seasonal snow cover in
North America from 1950 to 2002, the period for which comprehensive snow and air
observations exist across the region. Daily snow and SAT observations come from the U.S.
Historical Climatology Network, the Canadian Daily Climatic Dataset, and a set of
National Weather Service cooperative stations in Alaska. For the period 1961–1990 the
mean snow onset date in North America is 15 December, with mean snow cover duration
of 81 days. There are no significant trends in either onset or duration from 1950 to
2002. Winter season air temperature, however, has warmed during this period, particularly
from 1970 to 2002. The effect of the combination of a relatively stationary snow season
with winter season SAT warming has been to diminish the mean annual SGT-SAT
offset by -0.05 K/decade over the past 30 years. This effect is most pronounced between
50° and 75°N in west central North America, coincident with the location of greatest
winter season warming since 1970. Although comprehensive snow cover data do not exist
prior to 1950, this analysis quantifies the changes in snow cover required to account for
the difference between borehole temperature and multiproxy climate reconstructions.
Genre Article
Topic North America
Identifier Bartlett , M. G., D. S. Chapman, and R. N. Harris (2005), Snow effect on North American ground temperatures, 1950–2002, J. Geophys. Res., 110, F03008.

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