Guide to Measuring Snow
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Equipment
- The 4"
diameter rain gauges that we use for NeRAIN can be used for
measuring the water content of snow. However, you must remove
the inner measuring cylinder and funnel for measurements of
snow water content and other freezing/frozen precip. The inner
tube can easily crack and break if moisture collects and then
freezes. But keep the funnel and measurement tube handy indoors
-- you'll need it.
- Have a ruler
or yardstick ready.(ideally one that measures in inches
and tenths).
- You
should have a snow board (a flat board, painted white,
ideally about 16" x 16"). They come in very handy for
measuring snowfall. You
will need to identify a good representative location that is as
flat and level as possible where snow accumulates uniformly and
does not melt prematurely. Wooden decks are OK, but they should
be at least 20-30 feet away from your house since your house will
affect snow accumulation patterns.
- You may need
to have warm water handy.
Measuring Precipitation - the water content
of snow
The snow (rain,
freezing rain, etc. too) will collect in the 4" diameter outer
cylinder (overflow cylinder). If snow collects on the rim of the
gauge you have to decide what belongs in or out of the gauge.
Just take a book or flat object and push gently straight down on
the top of the gauge. Whatever falls in is in, and whatever falls
out is out. It may not be perfect, but at least it's objective.
With wet snows, a lot of snow can collect on the rim, so it makes
a difference.
Bring the gauge
inside at your time of observation. If it has stopped snowing, you
can bring it in earlier and just let the snow melt. But you may
need to hasten the process. In order to measure the water content
of snow with this type of gauge, you will need to melt the contents
and pour them back into the calibrated inner cylinder.
What I do is
take my inner calibrated cylinder and pour warm water into it and
jot down the amount. Then I add that warm water to the outer cylinder
so that all the snow melts. Then I pour the water back into the
inner tube and record the total amount. For example, lets say I
added 0.51" of warm water to the snow. Then when I measured
the total sample, it read 0.82" How much precipitation did
I get? The answer should be 0.31"
0.82" - Total of melted snow with the added warm water
-0.51" - Total warm water added to melt snow
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0.31" - Daily Precipitation
(the amount you should report)
I hope that makes sense. Make sure you avoid spilling. It can happen.
Some people have come up with creative ways to melt their snow in
their microwave or by setting their gauge in a basin of warm water.
That way they don't have to add and subtract additional water. Microwaving
rain gauge samples is not recommended, but a careful person can
do it successfully, or so I've been told. I've never tried it.
When you're
done, put the outer cylinder back outside, clean and dry, so it's
ready to collect the next snow
(During
heavy snow (6" or greater) the cylinder will fill to the top
and overflow with snow. You will have to measure more often than
once daily under heavy snow conditions.
Measuring Snowfall - New Snow Amount
Snowfall is
the maximum accumulation of fresh snow during the past day prior
to melting or settling. We measure snowfall to the nearest 0.1 (one-tenth)
inch. Maybe you have a ruler in tenths like me, but many don't.
Since snow melts and settles, you may have to measure during or
soon after snow ends in order to capture how much accumulated. By
7 AM their may be less.
For example
if the snow begins to fall in mid morning, accumulates to 4.2"
by 3 PM and then stops and begins melting and settling such that
by 7 AM the next morning you only have 2.6" of snow on your
snowboard, then the correct number to report for your 24-hour snowfall
(new snow amount) is 4.2" -- the accumulation prior to melting
and settling. If the ground was bare prior to this snow your snowdepth
(total depth of snow on the ground) would be rounded to the nearest
half inch and would be reported as 2.5 inches.
The trick in
measuring snow consistently is simply finding a good place to measure
and a firm surface (such as a snow board) for your ruler to set
on. Some people use low picnic tables, some use their car. I don't
recommend sidewalks since they tend to accelerate melting. Grass
is where snow accumulates first, and it is OK to measure on grassy
surfaces, but please know that the snow tends to sit up on top of
the blades of grass, sometimes by one to three inches. Your ruler,
on the other hand, will go right down through the snow and grass
to the ground and give you an exaggerated reading. Just be careful
to measure to the bottom of the snow not to the ground.
Measuring new
snow accumulation is easy when the snow falls without wind and isn't
melting on the ground. But when the wind blows, measuring snow becomes
a real challenge. We deal with drifted snow by simply taking many
measurements from a variety of locations and averaging them to get
a representative measure. You will get the hang of this -- with
experience.
If you use a
snowboard, take a core sample and then be
sure to clear the board after your measurement and set it in a nearby
location level on the surface of the new snow. If you leave it down
in a depression, it will tend to collect more snow from drifting
if the snow continues.
Snow depth - Total depth of snow on the
ground.
Snow depth is
simply the total depth of snow on ground at your scheduled observation
time (hopefully 7 AM or close). Snowdepth is measured to the nearest
half inch. It includes both new and old snow, and should be reported
even on days when no new snow has fallen. If necessary, take an
average of several measurements. For example, if half the ground
has 2" of old snow and the other half of the ground is already
bare, the average snowdepth would be 1".
Snow Cores - Core Precipitation
Under some circumstances
(primarily strong winds), your 4" diameter gauge will not catch
all of the snow that has fallen. You can watch windblown snow crystals
curve around a rain gauge like water going around a rock in a river.
If you believe your gauge has not adequately caught the precipitation
that has fallen (or, if you're just curious), then take a core sample
of the fresh snow that has fallen. After first measuring
the water contentin the gauge, then take the 4" outer
cylinder and "cut a biscuit" in the fresh snow by pushing
it straight down. It is best to do this on your snowboard (after
you've measured the snow depth, but before you have cleared the
snow and put it back on the surface). Use a thin sturdy cookie sheet
or something like that to slide under the cylinder so that you can
lift it up without spilling the contents. Be sure to measure in
a representative location -- not in a drift or in a wind-blown or
melted area. Then proceed to melt and measure
the water content like you would with any other measurement.
Snow Book
The Snow Booklet: A Guide to the Science,
Climatology and Measurement of Snow in the U.S" can be ordered from the
Colorado Climate Center
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