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Presentation
Investigating the early snowmelt of 2015 in the Cascade Mountains using new MODIS-based snowmelt timing maps
American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, 2017 (2017)
  • D. O'Leary
  • D. K. Hall
  • M. J. Medler
  • A. Flower
  • R. Matthews
Abstract
The spring of 2015 brought an alarmingly early snowmelt to the Cascade Mountains, impacting flora, fauna, watersheds, and wildfire activity. It is important that we understand these events because model-based projections suggest that snowmelt may arrive an average of 10-40 days earlier across the continental US by the year 2100. Available snow measurement methods including SNOTEL stations and stream gauges offer insights into point locations and individual watersheds, but lack the detail needed to assess snowmelt anomalies across the landscape. In this study we describe our new MODIS-based snowmelt timing maps (STMs), validate them with SNOTEL measurements, then use them to explore the spatial patterns of the 2015 snowmelt in the Cascades. We found that the Cascade Mountains experienced snowmelt 41 days earlier than the 2001-2015 average, with many areas melting >70 days early. Of concern to land managers, these events may be the ‘new normal’ in the decades to come.
https://doi.org/10.3334/ORNLDAAC/1504
Keywords
  • Snowmelt,
  • Snowmelt timing
Publication Date
December 12, 2017
Location
New Orleans
Citation Information
D. O'Leary, D. K. Hall, M. J. Medler, A. Flower, et al.. "Investigating the early snowmelt of 2015 in the Cascade Mountains using new MODIS-based snowmelt timing maps" American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, 2017 (2017)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/aquila-flower/28/