Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) /NWTablatraw.td: Snowpack ablation in alpine couloirs: Raw data
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For a more detailed metadata record, see:
https://portal.edirepository.org/nis/metadataviewer?packageid=knb-lter-nwt.126.4
Lowering of the snowpack surface by ablation (melt) was
measured on a bimonthly basis within couloirs above the Green Lakes
and Isabelle Valleys during the summer months.
The Niwot Ridge LTER site (40deg.3'N. 105deg.36'W.) is located
approximately 35 km west of Boulder, Colorado, with the entire study
site lying above 3000 m elevation. There is a cirque glacier (Arikaree
Glacier [~90K photo and caption]), extensive alpine tundra, a variety
of glacial landforms, glacial lakes and moraines, cirques and talus
slopes, patterned ground, and permafrost. The research area is bounded
on the west by the Continental Divide, with runoff on the two sides
being destined for the Colorado and Mississippi Rivers.
Information about the Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Program can
be obtained from:
LTER Network Office
College of Forest Resources AR-10
University of Washington
Seattle, WA 98195
Phone: 206-543-4853
FAX: 206-685-0790
Email: office@lternet.edu
https://lternet.edu/
or
National Science Foundation
Division of Environmental Biology
Long-Term Projects in Environmental Biology
Phone: 703-306-1479
Email: scollins@nsf.gov
https://lternet.edu/
Lowering of the snowpack surface by ablation (melt) was
measured on a bimonthly basis within couloirs above the Green Lakes
and Isabelle Valleys during the summer months.
The Niwot Ridge LTER site (40deg.3'N. 105deg.36'W.) is located
approximately 35 km west of Boulder, Colorado, with the entire study
site lying above 3000 m elevation. There is a cirque glacier (Arikaree
Glacier [~90K photo and caption]), extensive alpine tundra, a variety
of glacial landforms, glacial lakes and moraines, cirques and talus
slopes, patterned ground, and permafrost. The research area is bounded
on the west by the Continental Divide, with runoff on the two sides
being destined for the Colorado and Mississippi Rivers.
Information about the Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Program can
be obtained from:
LTER Network Office
College of Forest Resources AR-10
University of Washington
Seattle, WA 98195
Phone: 206-543-4853
FAX: 206-685-0790
Email: office@lternet.edu
https://lternet.edu/
or
National Science Foundation
Division of Environmental Biology
Long-Term Projects in Environmental Biology
Phone: 703-306-1479
Email: scollins@nsf.gov
https://lternet.edu/
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SCIOPS



