Skip to main content

News & events

Snow school: A cool way to learn about hydrology

Brooke Fisher
April 5, 2018

Professor Jessica Lundquist shows students how to see layers of a snow pit using a thermal infrared camera.

Snow school is cool on many levels. In January, CEE students attended a snow measurement field school where they learned about fundamental concepts and practices of snow hydrology.

About 25 students from around the world, including China and Nepal, gathered for the three-day snow school, sponsored by the Consortium of Universities for the Advancement of Hydrologic Science, with funding from NSF and NASA. Snow school was held at Fraser Experimental Forest in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. Attending from UW CEE were professor Jessica Lundquist, graduate students Victoria Ly, Steven Pestana and William Ryan Currier (who was the TA), undergraduate Dylan Reynolds and Valle Scholar Andri Gunnarsson.

CEE graduate student Victoria Ly (second from left) and students from Utah, North Carolina, and China are all smiles in a fresh snow storm.

“I couldn't have imagined a better way to start off studying snow hydrology than to be fully immersed in the field,” Victoria said. “Being in the field stimulates so many questions that are hard to imagine behind a computer screen.”

Snow hydrology focuses on measuring and analyzing the movement of snow and ice, which are important predictors of water melt that supplies water during dry months. To educate students on best practices in the field, leading scientists and instructors shared their insight during the three-day program. 

Morning lectures were followed by field demos on how to use different tools, including a magnaprobe to measure snow depth across a transect and an infrared camera to look at the temperature of snow at different layers.

“A lot of what we learned focused around the ‘snow pit,’ where we dug into the snow to the ground surface to examine an entire cross-section of the snow layers,” Steven said. “Within a snow pit, snow density measurements can be taken at different layers to provide the snow water equivalent— the depth of water that the melted snow would result in.”

CEE graduate student Steven Pestana uses a magnaprobe to measure snow depth across a study area.

Afternoons were spent in small groups, taking measurements with the newly learned tools and processing data. In the evenings, groups presented their results and discussed findings and observations.

“The focus wasn't on the data collected necessarily, but on being considerate of how the measurements were taken, what they represented and how they would be used to address future research questions,” Victoria said.

The snow school culminated with group projects, enabling the students to practice applying the new tools and concepts they learned. 

“The group I was in centered our question around a hypothetical situation, where a satellite had flown over the study area and we wanted to collect in situ (ground) data to validate the satellite data. We collected data on snow depth, snow density and snow water equivalent in a small field site,” Victoria said.

In addition to becoming more skilled at hands-on snow measurement practices, the students also took away an appreciation for gathering data in the field, which is often used to verify data collected by other means, such as satellites.

“With my research interests in remote sensing of snow, I have a greater appreciation for the data collected on the ground, which is used to inform or calibrate remote sensing observations and hydrology models, and for the wealth of information that can be learned by simply digging a snow pit and studying the snow’s layers, crystal structures, textures and density,” Steven said.