Open Access
A Comparison of Snow Telemetry and Snow Course Measurements in the Colorado River Basin
Author(s) -
K. A. Dressler,
S. R. Fassnacht,
Roger C. Bales
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of hydrometeorology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.733
H-Index - 123
eISSN - 1525-755X
pISSN - 1525-7541
DOI - 10.1175/jhm506.1
Subject(s) - snow , environmental science , variogram , hydrology (agriculture) , water year , drainage basin , interpolation (computer graphics) , snowmelt , streamflow , meteorology , geology , kriging , geography , cartography , mathematics , statistics , animation , computer graphics (images) , geotechnical engineering , computer science
Temporal and spatial differences in snow-water equivalent (SWE) at 240 snow telemetry (SNOTEL) and at 500 snow course sites and a subset of 93 collocated sites were evaluated by examining the correlation of site values over the snow season, interpolating point measurements to basin volumes using hypsometry and a maximum snow extent mask, and variogram analysis. The lowest correlation at a point (r = 0.79) and largest interpolated volume differences (as much as 150 mm of SWE over the Gunnison basin) occurred during wet years (e.g., 1993). Interpolation SWE values based on SNOTEL versus snow course sites were not consistently higher or lower relative to each other. Interpolation rmse was comparable for both datasets, increasing later in the snow season. Snow courses correlate over larger distances and have less short-scale variability than SNOTEL sites, making them more regionally representative. Using both datasets in hydrologic models will provide a range of predicted streamflow, which is potentially useful for water resources management.