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ARS Home » Plains Area » Las Cruces, New Mexico » Range Management Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #182703

Title: Snowfall, snowpack, and meltwater chemistry

Author
item DEWALLE, DAVID - PENN STATE UNIV
item Rango, Albert

Submitted to: Book Chapter
Publication Type: Book / Chapter
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/1/2008
Publication Date: 7/1/2008
Citation: Dewalle, D., Rango, A. 2008. Snowfall, snowpack, and meltwater chemistry. In: Dewalle, D., Rango, A., editors. Principles of Snow Hydrology. Cambridge, NY: Cambridge University Press. p. 211-234.

Interpretive Summary: No interpretive summary required.

Technical Abstract: Biogeochemical cycling of nutrients and pollutants in the environment is significantly affected by the occurrence of snowfall and snowpacks. Snowpacks can be viewed as reservoirs of chemicals that, unlike substances dissolved in rainfall, can be largely stored for significant periods of time during winter until melting occurs. Snowpacks reflect the chemical nature of the original snowfall events or wet deposition that accumulated to create them as well as the dry deposition of chemicals occurring as aerosol droplets, particles and gases in the atmosphere falling onto the snowpack surface during non-precipitation periods. Both naturally cycling chemicals and pollutants in the environment end up in the snowpack in this manner. Snowpack chemistry may also be affected by interactions with plant canopies during interception and the activity of organisms that find a home in the snow. Once melting or rain-on-snow events occur, chemicals are redistributed and released from the snowpack non-uniformly due to fractionation processes leading to relative enrichment of the initial liquid water releases. In polluted environments, early spring fish kills have been attributed to effects of these initial concentrated acidic snowmelt runoff events that caused toxic levels of dissolved aluminum to occur in streams. Studies have also shown that some ions are preferentially eluted or leached from the snowpack in different ratios than found in the snow itself. Thus, the overall effect of snow on chemicals cycling in the environment is to first store and then alter the timing and concentrations of ions moving in water through a catchment.