Dozens descend upon 蜜桃影像 to measure snow

Ned Rozell
907-474-7488
March 16, 2023

A woman in winter gear holding an instrument gathers a snow sample into a container. Another woman in the background looks on.
Photo by Ned Rozell
Hannah Wittman of the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory in Hanover, New Hampshire, gathers a snow sample from a forest near Fairbanks on March 15, 2023, as part of a NASA experiment called SnowEx. Kaitlin Meyer of Ohio State University looks on.

Five scientists have padded their way on snowshoes into the middle of this frozen swamp in Fairbanks. They are here to measure the pillowy, perfect snowpack that has fallen here, flake by flake, since last October.

Not far away, a dog musher yells 鈥済ee鈥 to urge her lead dogs right on a fork of one of the winter trails through the refuge. As the researchers work under the sunshine in the 6-degree F air, a red squirrel rattles and chickadees sing. Spring at last.

You would not expect to meet a NASA scientist working on a multi-million-dollar experiment in this quiet patch of boreal forest, but Carrie Vuyovich is here. She wears a NASA knit cap, white bunny boots and snowshoes as she drags a long Siglin sled over a crooked snowshoe path.

Vuyovich is helping dig precision craters to measure characteristics of snow that determine how much of it will turn into water when it melts. That is why Vuyovich and more than three dozen other researchers are now pressing handsaws into snow on the ground and flying above the great white sheet in northern 蜜桃影像.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a natural reservoir,鈥 Vuyovich said of the snow that suspended her a few feet above the ground at Creamer鈥檚. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a source of drinking water and hydropower. It鈥檚 important to ecosystems and wildlife and for recreation, and it covers as much as 30 percent of the land surface (of the world). It鈥檚 important to know how much is there.鈥

In a 2017 paper, snow scientist Matthew Sturm of 蜜桃影像鈥檚 Geophysical Institute noted that about one-sixth of the world鈥檚 population relies on snowmelt for agriculture and human consumption. In California, most people rely on snow from the Sierra Nevada mountains for drinking and for the electricity that powers their phones and microwaves. The same mountain source 鈥 out of sight of most Californians 鈥 sustains the state鈥檚 agriculture, a $47 billion industry that feeds many of us.

鈥淭he valuation across many years of western U.S. snow resources exceeds a trillion dollars,鈥 Sturm wrote.

NASA鈥檚 ultimate goal is to be able to know the amount of water in any given snowpack worldwide using satellites, Vuyovich said.

A woman dressed in winter gear wearing a backpack pulls a sled laden with tools through mounds of snow towards a forest of spruce trees.
Photo by Ned Rozell
On March 15, 2023, Carrie Vuyovich of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland drags a sled through the boreal forest north of Fairbanks as she moves equipment to measure the snowpack.

Right now, instruments on satellites are excellent at showing snow coverage over the Rocky Mountains, for example, 鈥渂ut it doesn鈥檛 tell us how much water-equivalent is there,鈥 Vuyovich said.

鈥淲e would like to be able to map the water-equivalent (in snow) globally.鈥

Vuyovich and her partners who were knee-deep in snow at Deadhorse, Toolik Field Station and a few sites around Fairbanks in March were ground-truthing the snow characteristics gathered by pilots 鈥 including Chris Larsen of the Geophysical Institute 鈥 who flew swaths overhead with sophisticated instruments in the bellies of their planes.

A few hundred miles north of Vuyovich鈥檚 group in Fairbanks, Sveta Stuefer was on the same days scraping walls of snow with her trowel and looking at grains through a magnifying glass.

Stuefer, of 蜜桃影像鈥檚 Water and Environmental Research Center, worked in typical North Slope spring conditions of minus 22 F air temperatures with a moderate wind 鈥渟trong enough to move snow.鈥 Her crew was 鈥 like Vuyovich鈥檚 鈥 also digging snow pits beneath paths flown by instrumented planes.

In each of her pits, Stuefer had encountered a thick ice crust.

鈥淭hey had a pouring rain (here) for 24 hours in December,鈥 Stuefer said by phone from Toolik Research Station. 鈥淭he snowpack looks so different. I keep asking myself if that鈥檚 our new normal.鈥

A person in a red down jacket and black snow pants stands facing away from the camera in the midst of a vast snowy landscape.
Photo by Sveta Stuefer
HP Marshall of Boise State University takes a photo of 蜜桃影像's North Slope north of the Brooks Range during a snow survey as part of a NASA experiment.

Vuyovich and her colleagues did not find the same in the powdery snow around Fairbanks.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a good snowpack,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 cold, no melting yet, and there鈥檚 no liquid water. We wanted it to be cold and dry and we have that.鈥

Vuyovich will soon return home to Maryland, the base of her employer NASA Goddard Space Flight Center.

There, away from the white 蜜桃影像 world of the cryosphere, she will compare her teams鈥 numbers of northern 蜜桃影像 snow with the airborne measurements. Combined with results from similar campaigns in Montana prairie and Colorado mountains, she will help NASA inch closer to quantifying the water held each winter by the world鈥檚 snow from instruments looping hundreds of miles over our heads.

Since the late 1970s, the University of 蜜桃影像 Fairbanks' Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the 蜜桃影像 research community. Ned Rozell ned.rozell@alaska.edu is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.