Figure 6. Animation illustrating
the modeled spatial distribution of SWE throughout the study period. Hourly
model output was sampled every six hours to create the animation. The simulation
begins by depicting the gradual ablation in the southern margins of the
snow pack from March 26 through April 3. Warm air temperatures and rainfall
beginning on April 4 resulted in rapid, widespread ablation of the snowpack,
but as the rain turned to snow, accumulation begins again, especially in
the northwest part of the study area (central North Dakota primarily).
Additional snow accumulation occurs in the southern study area (central
South Dakota and southern Minnesota) on April 11, but the accumulation
is shallow and melts off within a few days. From April 14 until the
end of the study period on April 22, widespread snowmelt and ablation of
the snow pack occurred. The large "spike" of SWE that remains in
the northwest part of the study area (near Lake Winnibigoshish, MN) is
an artifact of the estimation of initial SWE conditions used to cold-start
the snow model. Two sites in that vicinity reported snow depth on the ground
on March 26 that was substantially greater than surrounding sites. While
the model indicates rapid snowmelt was occurring throughout this area,
it was unable to melt off the estimated snow pack in the Lake Winnibigoshish
vicinity.
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