CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
Search Results
Author : Derksen, C.; LeDrew, E.; and Goodison, B.
Date : 2000.
Title : Temporal and spatial variability of North American prairie snow cover (1988 to 1995) inferred from passive microwave snow water equivalent imagery.
Publication : Water Resources Research
Issue : 36(1):
Page(s) : 255-266.
Abstract
Estimates of regional snow water equivalent (SWE) are essential for hydrological prediction, climatological analysis, and meteorological forecasting. Passive microwave derived estimates of snow cover have unique benefits such as all-weather imaging, rapid scene revisit capabilities, and the ability to provide these quantitative SWE data. For this study, the available time series of Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I) brightness temperatures in the EASE-Grid (Equal Area SSM/I Earth Grid) projection were processed with the Canadian Atmospheric Environment Service (AES) dual channel SWE algorithm for a ground validated North American Prairie region. Seven winter seasons (December, January, February) of SWE imagery spanning 1988 to 1995 and averaged for five dayintervals, were subjected to a rotated principal components analysis (PCA), performed individually for each season. A final PCA considering all seven winter seasons was performed in order to investigate the degree to which snow cover patterns reappear from one season to the next. Results indicate that modes of snow cover in the North American Prairies are most persistent during the late winter (February), and exhibit a greater degree of variability during December than the other winter months. Two snow cover regimes are identified for the study region, with the winters of 1988/89 through 1991/92 characterized in a manner that is unique in both temporal and spatial aspects from the winters of 1992/93 through 1994/95.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology