Welcome to the US Army Cold Regions Research & Engineering Lab!






Snow Hydrology

Areas of Research in Snow Hydrology:

  • Snow pack property and isotopic evolution during snowmelt
  • Snowmelt and frozen soil models 1-D
  • Spatially distributed 1-D snow models
  • Melt pathways in snow
  • Roughness lengths over snow
  • Watershed and water supply management
  • Snow covered area mapping
  • Wind redistribution of snow



Publications:

Click here for a complete listing of recent Snow Hydrology Publications.

Andreas, E. L, R. E. Jordan, P. S. Guest, P. O. G. Persson, A. A. Grachev, and C. W. Fairall (2004) Roughness lengths over snow. Preprints, 18th Conference on Hydrology, Seattle, WA, 11–15 January 2004, American Meteorological Society, CD-ROM JP4.31, 8 pp.

Melloh, R. and J.P. Hardy (2004). A basin segmentation approach for distributed snowmelt in the Hubbard Brook Forest, New Hampshire. In Proceedings 61th Eastern Snow Conference, June 10-11, Portland, ME. USA.

Melloh , R., T. Hall and R. Bailey (2004) Radiation Data corrections for snow-covered sensors: Are they needed for snowmelt modeling ? Hydrological Processes18: 1113-1126.

Taylor S., X. Feng, M. Williams and J. McNamera (2002) Estimating the isotopic composition of snowmelt for hydrograph separation, Hydrological Processes16, 3683-3690.





For more information about the SNOW Interest Group and its members, contact:

Janet Hardy
Phone: 603-646-4306
Fax: 603-646-4644
E-mail: Janet.P.Hardy@erdc.usace.army.mil

Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory
72 Lyme Road,
Hanover, New Hampshire, USA 03755-1290


Pagemaster: kclaffey@crrel.usace.army.mil
Page last updated: 14 May 2005(kjc)

Matthew Sturm
Phone: 907-353-5183
Fax: 907-353-5142
E-mail: Matthew.Sturm@erdc.usace.army.mil

USA-CRREL-Alaska
(Building 4070)
P.O. Box 35170
Ft. Wainwright, Alaska 99703-0170

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