New Metrics, Modeling Applications, and Observational Strategies for Snowpacks in Remote, Data-Limited, Mountain Environments

The topics in this dissertation center on the snow processes that dominate mountain environments in the Western U.S. and Alaska, particularly in locations lacking long-term observational datasets or locales that are difficult to access in-person. Some are currently glacierized or have been glaciated...

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Main Author: Crumley, Ryan L.
Other Authors: Nolin, Anne W., Hill, David F., Kennedy, Robert, Arendt, Anthony, Cramer, Lori
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
unknown
Published: Oregon State University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/tb09jc31s
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:tb09jc31s 2024-09-15T18:07:35+00:00 New Metrics, Modeling Applications, and Observational Strategies for Snowpacks in Remote, Data-Limited, Mountain Environments Crumley, Ryan L. Nolin, Anne W. Hill, David F. Kennedy, Robert Arendt, Anthony Cramer, Lori https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/tb09jc31s English [eng] eng unknown Oregon State University https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/tb09jc31s All rights reserved Dissertation ftoregonstate 2024-07-22T18:06:06Z The topics in this dissertation center on the snow processes that dominate mountain environments in the Western U.S. and Alaska, particularly in locations lacking long-term observational datasets or locales that are difficult to access in-person. Some are currently glacierized or have been glaciated in the recent past. Each of the three projects and study areas have hydrographs that are highly influenced by winter snowpack and spring snowmelt, and the processes that govern snowpack evolution and ablation during the water year. Each of the research questions in the following three projects were designed within the context of anthropogenically forced changes to temperature and precipitation, and the downstream implications for water resources management. These forces of change may be enhanced in the coming decades as our global economic pursuits continue to pump, unabated, gigatons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. The circumstances of this current and future non-stationarity of the climate system affects the assumptions made during the formation of each research question. The research projects in the following chapters are built on the foundation of the three legs of successful snow research: 1) physically-based modeling of snow processes, 2) remote sensing of snowpacks, and 3) ground observations of snow conditions. Chapter 1 is a general literature review connecting theories and ideas from several disciplines relevant to the research questions from each chapter. The literature review includes a history of energy balance and snowmelt modeling, an overview of physically-based snow modeling, and discusses citizen science in the hydrologic sciences. Chapter 2 is an investigation into the seasonal components of freshwater discharge to Glacier Bay, Alaska. The chapter includes a historical analysis and a future projection scenario of freshwater runoff based on climatic changes in temperature and precipitation by the end of the century. The key findings of this research show that projection scenario runoff to ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis glacier Alaska ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
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language English
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description The topics in this dissertation center on the snow processes that dominate mountain environments in the Western U.S. and Alaska, particularly in locations lacking long-term observational datasets or locales that are difficult to access in-person. Some are currently glacierized or have been glaciated in the recent past. Each of the three projects and study areas have hydrographs that are highly influenced by winter snowpack and spring snowmelt, and the processes that govern snowpack evolution and ablation during the water year. Each of the research questions in the following three projects were designed within the context of anthropogenically forced changes to temperature and precipitation, and the downstream implications for water resources management. These forces of change may be enhanced in the coming decades as our global economic pursuits continue to pump, unabated, gigatons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. The circumstances of this current and future non-stationarity of the climate system affects the assumptions made during the formation of each research question. The research projects in the following chapters are built on the foundation of the three legs of successful snow research: 1) physically-based modeling of snow processes, 2) remote sensing of snowpacks, and 3) ground observations of snow conditions. Chapter 1 is a general literature review connecting theories and ideas from several disciplines relevant to the research questions from each chapter. The literature review includes a history of energy balance and snowmelt modeling, an overview of physically-based snow modeling, and discusses citizen science in the hydrologic sciences. Chapter 2 is an investigation into the seasonal components of freshwater discharge to Glacier Bay, Alaska. The chapter includes a historical analysis and a future projection scenario of freshwater runoff based on climatic changes in temperature and precipitation by the end of the century. The key findings of this research show that projection scenario runoff to ...
author2 Nolin, Anne W.
Hill, David F.
Kennedy, Robert
Arendt, Anthony
Cramer, Lori
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Crumley, Ryan L.
spellingShingle Crumley, Ryan L.
New Metrics, Modeling Applications, and Observational Strategies for Snowpacks in Remote, Data-Limited, Mountain Environments
author_facet Crumley, Ryan L.
author_sort Crumley, Ryan L.
title New Metrics, Modeling Applications, and Observational Strategies for Snowpacks in Remote, Data-Limited, Mountain Environments
title_short New Metrics, Modeling Applications, and Observational Strategies for Snowpacks in Remote, Data-Limited, Mountain Environments
title_full New Metrics, Modeling Applications, and Observational Strategies for Snowpacks in Remote, Data-Limited, Mountain Environments
title_fullStr New Metrics, Modeling Applications, and Observational Strategies for Snowpacks in Remote, Data-Limited, Mountain Environments
title_full_unstemmed New Metrics, Modeling Applications, and Observational Strategies for Snowpacks in Remote, Data-Limited, Mountain Environments
title_sort new metrics, modeling applications, and observational strategies for snowpacks in remote, data-limited, mountain environments
publisher Oregon State University
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/tb09jc31s
genre glacier
Alaska
genre_facet glacier
Alaska
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/tb09jc31s
op_rights All rights reserved
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