AbstractIn the western United States, water stored as mountain snowpack is a large percentage of the total water needed to meet the region’s demands, and it is likely that, as the planet continues to warm, mountain snowpack will decline. However, detecting such trends in the observational record is challenging because snowpack is highly variable in both space and time. Here, a method for characterizing mountain snowpack is developed that is based on fitting observed annual cycles of snow water equivalent (SWE) to a gamma-distribution probability density function. A new method for spatially interpolating the distribution’s fitting parameters to create a gridded climatology of SWE is also presented. Analysis of these data shows robust trends ...
The snowpack is an important seasonal surface water storage reservoir that affects the availability ...
The water supply in the western United States is in large part derived from runoff originating from ...
[Suggested Citation: "Sproles, Eric (2017): A spatial-probabilistic assessment of the extraordinaril...
AbstractIn the western United States, water stored as mountain snowpack is a large percentage of the...
These data describes changes in western US snow water equivalent (SWE) over the 1982–2017 water year...
Recent studies have shown substantial declines in snow water equivalent (SWE) over much of the weste...
We present long-term average and annual Snow Storage Index values over mountainous western North Ame...
In western North America, snow provides crucial storage of winter precipitation, effectively transfe...
The spatial characteristics and patterns of snow accumulation and ablation inform the amount of wate...
Throughout the western United States, seasonal snowpack is critical for water resources timing and a...
Records of 1 April snow water equivalent (SWE) are examined here using multiple linear regression ag...
Snowpack is an important source of water supply in the western United States. This study examines th...
In the Western U.S. seasonal snowpacks have historically been important for recharging groundwater a...
The annual storage of water in the form of snow is crucial to Montana’s ecosystem and economy. Agric...
Temperature variability impacts the distribution and persistence of the mountain snowpack, which cri...
The snowpack is an important seasonal surface water storage reservoir that affects the availability ...
The water supply in the western United States is in large part derived from runoff originating from ...
[Suggested Citation: "Sproles, Eric (2017): A spatial-probabilistic assessment of the extraordinaril...
AbstractIn the western United States, water stored as mountain snowpack is a large percentage of the...
These data describes changes in western US snow water equivalent (SWE) over the 1982–2017 water year...
Recent studies have shown substantial declines in snow water equivalent (SWE) over much of the weste...
We present long-term average and annual Snow Storage Index values over mountainous western North Ame...
In western North America, snow provides crucial storage of winter precipitation, effectively transfe...
The spatial characteristics and patterns of snow accumulation and ablation inform the amount of wate...
Throughout the western United States, seasonal snowpack is critical for water resources timing and a...
Records of 1 April snow water equivalent (SWE) are examined here using multiple linear regression ag...
Snowpack is an important source of water supply in the western United States. This study examines th...
In the Western U.S. seasonal snowpacks have historically been important for recharging groundwater a...
The annual storage of water in the form of snow is crucial to Montana’s ecosystem and economy. Agric...
Temperature variability impacts the distribution and persistence of the mountain snowpack, which cri...
The snowpack is an important seasonal surface water storage reservoir that affects the availability ...
The water supply in the western United States is in large part derived from runoff originating from ...
[Suggested Citation: "Sproles, Eric (2017): A spatial-probabilistic assessment of the extraordinaril...