Earth Science News
WHITE OUT
The surprising secrets of extreme snowfall events in Utah's central Wasatch
The Utah ski town of Alta, in the Wasatch Mountains' Little Cottonwood Canyon, is one of the snowiest places in the Intermountain West.
The surprising secrets of extreme snowfall events in Utah's central Wasatch
by Staff Writers
Salt Lake City UT (SPX) Feb 12, 2024

Major snowstorms in Utah's Wasatch Mountains are both a blessing and a curse. They deliver much-needed moisture that supplies water to the state's biggest metropolitan area and fluffy light snow to support the world's finest powder skiing.

But heavy snowfall also wreaks havoc on canyon roads and creates extreme avalanche hazards that can sometimes shut down busy winter recreation sites. Alta at the head of Little Cottonwood Canyon, for instance, can be reached by vehicle only via a winding road that rises 3,000 feet in 8 miles, crossing about 50 avalanche paths.

University of Utah atmospheric scientists have set out to better understand extreme snowfall, defined as events in the top 5% in terms of snow accumulations, by analyzing hundreds of events over a 23-year period at Alta, the famed ski destination in the central Wasatch outside Salt Lake City. The resulting study, published this week in Monthly Weather Review, illustrates the remarkable diversity of storm characteristics producing orographic snowfall extremes in the ranges of the Intermountain West.

The orographic effect occurs when air is forced to flow up and over mountains, which cools the air and condenses its water vapor.

Some of the new findings surprised researchers. For example, they looked for an association between heavy snow and a weather factor called "integrated vapor transport," or IVT, but found a complicated relationship.

"IVT is essentially a measure of the amount of water vapor that is being transported horizontally through the atmosphere, said lead author Michael Wasserstein, a graduate student in atmospheric sciences. "In certain regions high IVT can produce extremely heavy precipitation. That can be the case for the Wasatch, but not always."

In the West Coast's Sierra Nevada and Cascade Range, by contrast, there is a stronger relationship between high-IVT storms blowing in from the Pacific and extreme precipitation and snowfall.

Spanning the years 2000 to 2022, the study, which was funded by the National Science Foundation, analyzed a total of 2,707 snow events, each covering a 12-hour period. The average amount of snow deposited during each event was 11.2 centimeters (4.4 inches), while the median amount was just 7.6 (3 inches). Alta ski patrollers did much of the data collection at the monitoring station located near the ski area's Wildcat Lift.

The researchers homed in on "extreme" events above the 95th percentile, or 138 storms in which 30.5 centimeters (12 inches) or more snow fell. "Those would be snowfall rates of about an average of an inch an hour," said Jim Steenburgh, the study's senior author.

The biggest 12-hour accumulation was 65 centimeters (26 inches), recorded on March 30, 2005. They also examined "extreme" water-equivalent snowfall events above the 95th percentile, or 116 storms with at least 27.9 mm (1.11 inches) of water equivalent precipitation. The water equivalent of precipitation measures the amount of water in the snowfall and is important for water resources and avalanches.

The researchers found the storm systems reaching Utah that carried relatively little water vapor were still capable of dropping heavy snows as they passed over the central Wasatch. And it wasn't just a result of Utah's notorious "lake effect," snowfall associated with moisture getting extracted off the Great Salt Lake, according to Steenburgh, a professor of atmospheric sciences.

IVT is measured in terms of kilograms of water moving a meter each second.

"IVT is one of the ways that we identify atmospheric rivers," said Steenburgh, noting an IVT value of 250 qualifies as an atmospheric river, like the one pounding Southern California this week. "And the higher the IVT, the more extreme the atmospheric river is."

Steenburgh is affectionately known around campus and Utah's ski community as Professor Powder because of his intimate knowledge of the meteorological factors behind the Wasatch Mountains' famous snow. [You can listen to the Utah Avalanche Center's podcast interview with Steenburgh here.]

"We rarely get true atmospheric river conditions at Alta," he said. "We might get an atmospheric river that decays upstream, and by the time it gets here, the IVT values are below the minimum threshold."

Even in the driest of winters, Alta still receives ample snowfall with seasonal totals almost always exceeding 300 inches and averaging more than 500 inches.

"If you go to the Sierra, most of their big snowfall events are big atmospheric river events," Steenburgh said. "But at Alta, some of their biggest snowfall events are relatively low IVT events. They are incredibly efficient at producing snowfall."

Researchers found such events occur regardless of which way the wind is coming from, although colder snowstorms with fluffy snow tend to come from either the west-northwest or the northwest. In contrast, snowstorms with the highest water content within the new snow tend to come from the south-southwest or west-northwest.

The researchers attributed this to shadowing from the Stansbury and Oquirrh ranges to the west, as well as the Wasatch's "three-dimensional" topography resulting from its sub-ridges fingering off its north-south crest that capture upslope flow from a variety of directions.

Future research is needed to better understand how the complicated multi-age topography of Great Basin's mountain ranges affects precipitation processes.

Research Report:Diverse characteristics of extreme orographic snowfall events in Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah

Related Links
University of Utah
It's A White Out at TerraDaily.com

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
WHITE OUT
'Historic' snowfall buries Canada's Atlantic coast
Montreal (AFP) Feb 6, 2024
Residents along Canada's Atlantic coast on Monday were digging out from a "historic" snowfall that paralyzed parts of the province of Nova Scotia over the weekend, triggering a state of emergency. More than a meter (three feet) of snow combined with powerful gusts of wind, halting transportation networks and forcing many businesses, government offices and schools to shutter. "It is very likely that areas around southeastern Cape Breton exceeded 100 centimeters" (39 inches) of precipitation, Envi ... read more

WHITE OUT
Five drown in migrant boat sinking off Malta

Hundred-car collision on icy China road causes nine injuries

Munich Re beats profit forecast despite Turkey quake

US Supreme Court to hear 'bump stocks' gun case

WHITE OUT
Sony cuts 900 PlayStation jobs

'I need to fight': UK steelworkers in fear as less pollution means less jobs

Starnote extension by Blues and Skylo promises seamless satellite connectivity for IoT Devices

Rocket Lab Sets Course for Historic In-Space Manufacturing Capsule Return

WHITE OUT
Tuvalu to elect PM on Monday, four weeks after elections

Paris holds its breath for Olympic swimming events in murky Seine

Tuvalu names new PM, Taiwan says ties 'everlasting'

English rivers in 'desperate' state: report

WHITE OUT
Indigenous Colombians fret as sacred mountain glaciers melt

Indigenous Colombians fret as sacred mountain glaciers melt

Polar bears struggling to adapt to longer ice-free Arctic periods

Currently stable parts of East Antarctica may be closer to melting than anyone realized

WHITE OUT
Costa Rica coffee farmers innovate as rainfall plummets

EU parliament backs contested biodiversity bill

2 million animals dead as extreme winter weather hits Mongolia

New farmer show of force as EU ministers vow to target red tape

WHITE OUT
Turkey quake survivors seek justice one year on

Cyclone hits northeast Australia leaving thousands without power

Japan says New Year quake damage could cost $17 billion

Mauritius grounds flights as it braces for tropical storm

WHITE OUT
Niger debt suffers multiple defaults after coup

EU 'regrets' Mali scrapping peace deal with separatists

Blinken nudges Nigeria on capital flows for US businesses

Activist abducted in latest Burkina Faso kidnapping

WHITE OUT
Finding Skywalker gibbons with love songs: study

Roads, farming threaten Ecuador 'lost city' complex

Innovation in stone tool technology involved multiple stages at the time of modern human dispersals

Scandinavia's first farmers slaughtered the hunter-gatherer population

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.