Snowfall interception is particularly important to the hydrology of forested cold regions. Unloading of intercepted snow controls the snow available for interception loss due to sublimation from that held in the canopy. This thesis seeks to determine the factors that affect the magnitude and timing of unloading at the forest-stand scale. A field program was established that measured interception and unloading at a forest-stand scale using a series of hanging lysimeters and a 7 m tall spruce tree suspended, in-situ, on a load-cell. Meteorological conditions including snowfall, wind speed, air temperature, and incoming radiation were recorded above and below the forest canopy. Unloading did not behave as described by current unloading models...
Snow cover in the Western Canadian Arctic is a significant input to the hydrological mass balance, i...
Insufficient understanding of winter hydrology conditions still hampers progress in predicting sprin...
Insufficient understanding of winter hydrology conditions still hampers progress in predicting sprin...
Snowfall interception is particularly important to the hydrology of forested cold regions. Unloading...
Snowfall interception is particularly important to the hydrology of forested cold regions. Unloading...
The objective of this work is to investigate the influence of forested areas on the ac- cumulation a...
xii, 135 leaves : ill. ; 29 cmForest disturbances significantly affect snowmelt dominated watersheds...
Abstract Cold regions hydrology has a great demand for improved prediction because most cold regions...
Improved representations of snow interception by coniferous forest canopies and sublimation of inter...
Improved representations of snow interception by coniferous forest canopies and sublimation of inter...
A series of process-based algorithms has been developed to describe the accumulation, unloading and ...
xiii, 171 leaves ; 29 cmSnow accumulation in mountain headwater basins is vitally important to south...
[1] The results of a 3 year field study to observe the processes controlling snow interception by fo...
Snow cover in the Western Canadian Arctic is a significant input to the hydrological mass balance, i...
Snow cover in the Western Canadian Arctic is a significant input to the hydrological mass balance, i...
Snow cover in the Western Canadian Arctic is a significant input to the hydrological mass balance, i...
Insufficient understanding of winter hydrology conditions still hampers progress in predicting sprin...
Insufficient understanding of winter hydrology conditions still hampers progress in predicting sprin...
Snowfall interception is particularly important to the hydrology of forested cold regions. Unloading...
Snowfall interception is particularly important to the hydrology of forested cold regions. Unloading...
The objective of this work is to investigate the influence of forested areas on the ac- cumulation a...
xii, 135 leaves : ill. ; 29 cmForest disturbances significantly affect snowmelt dominated watersheds...
Abstract Cold regions hydrology has a great demand for improved prediction because most cold regions...
Improved representations of snow interception by coniferous forest canopies and sublimation of inter...
Improved representations of snow interception by coniferous forest canopies and sublimation of inter...
A series of process-based algorithms has been developed to describe the accumulation, unloading and ...
xiii, 171 leaves ; 29 cmSnow accumulation in mountain headwater basins is vitally important to south...
[1] The results of a 3 year field study to observe the processes controlling snow interception by fo...
Snow cover in the Western Canadian Arctic is a significant input to the hydrological mass balance, i...
Snow cover in the Western Canadian Arctic is a significant input to the hydrological mass balance, i...
Snow cover in the Western Canadian Arctic is a significant input to the hydrological mass balance, i...
Insufficient understanding of winter hydrology conditions still hampers progress in predicting sprin...
Insufficient understanding of winter hydrology conditions still hampers progress in predicting sprin...