Seasonal Snowpacks

Seasonal Snowpacks
Author: Trevor D. Davies
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 474
Release: 2013-06-29
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3642751121

Seasonal Snowpacks examines the processes which control the chemistry of seasonal snowcover and provides detailed information on the biogeographical distribution of snow (e.g. urban, alpine snowpacks), snow composition (e.g. micropollutants, stable isotopes) or the physical and biological processes which influence the chemical changes in snow (e.g. wind, microbiological activity). The fluxes of chemicals at the snow-atmosphere and snow-soil interfaces are examined, as are processes which modify composition within the snowcover. It is the first book in which the reader will find a comprehensive overview of the theoretical concepts, latest measurement techniques, process-oriented research methods, and models of studies in snow chemistry. The linkages between snow chemistry, atmospheric chemistry and hydrology will make this book of use to both research workers and students in the physical and biological sciences and to natural resource management personnel.

Snowcover

Snowcover
Author: National Hydrology Research Institute (Canada)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 350
Release: 1997
Genre:
ISBN:

Snow density, depth, water equivalent, snowcover distribution, interception, coniferous forest canopies, wind transport, saltation, suspension, blowing snow, prairies, western Canada, snow management and control practice, vegetative practices.

Snowcover Accumulation, Relocation and Management

Snowcover Accumulation, Relocation and Management
Author: John Willard Pomeroy
Publisher: Saskatoon : National Hydrology Research Institute
Total Pages: 170
Release: 1995
Genre: Hydrology
ISBN:

Seasonal snowcover exerts a major influence on the environment and human activity, playing significant roles in water supply, agriculture, forestry, and natural resource management. This publication is a contribution to the understanding of the natural behavior of snowcover. It begins with a chapter on three of the most important physical properties of snowcover: depth, density, and water equivalent, and methods of their measurement. It then examines the areal variability of snowcover and the effects of such factors as topography and vegetation on snowcover distribution; the interception of snow by forests and its sublimation, melting, unloading, and redistribution; wind transport of snow; and the estimation of blowing snow transport and sublimation rates on the western Canadian prairies. The publication ends with a chapter on snow management and control practices in forestry and agriculture.