The interplay of moisture, temperature, and precipitation forced through the orographic processes sustain and regulate the Himalayan cryospheric system. However, factors influencing the Slope Environmental Lapse Rate (SELR) of temperature along the Himalayan mountain slopes and an appropriate modeling solution remain as a key knowledge gaps. The present study evaulates the SELR variations in the monsoon regime of the western Himalaya and proposes a modeling solution for the valley scale SELR assessment. SELR of selected station pairs in the Sutlej and Beas basins ranging between the elevation of 662–3,130 m a.s.l. and that of Garhwal Himalaya between 770 and 3,820 m a.s.l. were assessed in this study. Results suggest that the moisture–tempe...
The Himalayan region is characterized by pronounced topographic heterogeneity and land use variabili...
The Hindu-Kush Karakoram Himalaya (HKKH) contains the third largest quantity of snow and ice in the ...
The present study assesses the effect of accounting the temporal variation of near-surface lapse rat...
The performance of glaciohydrological models which simulate catchment response to climate variabilit...
Abstract The performance of glaciohydrological models which simulate catchment response to climate v...
Various environmental processes are strongly controlled by spatio-temporal variations of surface air...
Air temperature is a key control of processes affecting snow and glaciers in high-elevation catchmen...
Various studies reported an elevation dependent precipitation and temperature changes in mountainous...
Air temperature is a key control of processes affecting snow and glaciers in high-elevation catchmen...
Climate records for locations across the southern slope of the Himalaya between 77°E and 91°E were s...
Between June and September each year, the Indian monsoon typically delivers about 80% of the Nepales...
The climate and hydrology of the Western Himalayas is complex and a function of snow and glacier mel...
The Hindu-Kush Karakoram Himalaya (HKKH) contains the third largest quantity of snow and ice in the ...
The Himalayan region is characterized by pronounced topographic heterogeneity and land use variabili...
The Hindu-Kush Karakoram Himalaya (HKKH) contains the third largest quantity of snow and ice in the ...
The present study assesses the effect of accounting the temporal variation of near-surface lapse rat...
The performance of glaciohydrological models which simulate catchment response to climate variabilit...
Abstract The performance of glaciohydrological models which simulate catchment response to climate v...
Various environmental processes are strongly controlled by spatio-temporal variations of surface air...
Air temperature is a key control of processes affecting snow and glaciers in high-elevation catchmen...
Various studies reported an elevation dependent precipitation and temperature changes in mountainous...
Air temperature is a key control of processes affecting snow and glaciers in high-elevation catchmen...
Climate records for locations across the southern slope of the Himalaya between 77°E and 91°E were s...
Between June and September each year, the Indian monsoon typically delivers about 80% of the Nepales...
The climate and hydrology of the Western Himalayas is complex and a function of snow and glacier mel...
The Hindu-Kush Karakoram Himalaya (HKKH) contains the third largest quantity of snow and ice in the ...
The Himalayan region is characterized by pronounced topographic heterogeneity and land use variabili...
The Hindu-Kush Karakoram Himalaya (HKKH) contains the third largest quantity of snow and ice in the ...
The present study assesses the effect of accounting the temporal variation of near-surface lapse rat...