Rain-induced outflow from deep snowpacks in the central Sierra Nevada,California |
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Authors: | NEIL BERG RANDALL OSTERHUBER JAMES BERGMAN |
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Institution: | 1. Pacific Southwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service , PO Box 245, Berkely, California, 94701, USA;2. Central Sierra Environmental Studies Laboratory , PO Box 810, Soda Springs, California, 95728, USA;3. Forest Service USDA , PO Box 909, Truckee, California, 95734, USA |
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Abstract: | Abstract In many mountainous areas of the Pacific coast of North America, rainfall onto snowpacks causes massive floods, probably the single greatest cause of changes in channel morphology and lotie habitats. To understand and model this hydrometeorological phenomenon better, process-response hypotheses were developed for snowpack outflow amount, duration and rate and the time lags from the beginning of rainfall to initial and peak outflow. The hypotheses were evaluated by correlation and regression analyses based on measurements of 20 rainon-snow events monitored between 1984 and 1990 at forested and open plots near Lake Tahoe, California. Outflow amount correlated significantly with precipitation amount, duration and rate, snow depth and melt potential. Many of these variables also correlated significantly with outflow duration and rate and lag time to peak outlfow. Regression models expalined 80–90% of the variation in outflow amount and duration. Significant differences were not identified between the forest and open plots for any of the outflow attributes. |
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