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European snow cover extent variability and associations with atmospheric forcings

✍ Scribed by Gina R. Henderson; Daniel J. Leathers


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
725 KB
Volume
30
Category
Article
ISSN
0899-8418

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Snow cover in Europe represents an important component of the region's climatic system. Variability in snow cover extent can have major implications on factors such as low‐level atmospheric temperatures, soil temperatures, soil moisture, stream discharge, and energy allocation involved in the warming and melting of the snowpack. The majority of studies investigating Northern Hemisphere snow cover identify European snow cover extent as a portion of the Eurasian record, possibly masking complexities of this subset. This study explores the variability of European snow cover extent from 1967–2007, with the region in question including the area of Europe extending eastward to the Ural Mountains (60°E). Using the 89 × 89 gridded National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Northern Hemisphere weekly satellite snow cover product, area estimates of seasonal snow cover were calculated, and their relationship to gridded temperature, precipitation, and sea‐level pressure data analysed. The spatial variability of snow cover extent was also explored using geographical information systems (GIS). The combined results from both surface temperature and precipitation analyses point towards snow cover extent in Europe being primarily temperature dependent. Atmospheric variables associated with extremes in snow cover extent were investigated. Large (small) European snow extent is associated with negative (positive) 850 hPa zonal wind anomalies, negative (positive) European 1000–500 hPa thickness anomalies, and generally positive (negative) Northern European precipitation anomalies. Sea‐level pressure and 500 hPa results indicate strong associations between large (small) snow cover seasons and the negative (positive) phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation. Copyright © 2009 Royal Meteorological Society


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