Authors
Ernesto Trujillo, Katherine Leonard, Ted Maksym, Michael Lehning
Publication date
2016/11
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
Volume
121
Issue
11
Pages
2172-2191
Description
Snow distribution over sea ice is an important control on sea ice physical and biological processes. We combine measurements of the atmospheric boundary layer and blowing snow on an Antarctic sea ice floe with terrestrial laser scanning to characterize a typical storm and its influence on the spatial patterns of snow distribution at resolutions of 1–10 cm over an area of 100 m × 100 m. The pre‐storm surface exhibits multidirectional elongated snow dunes formed behind aerodynamic obstacles. Newly deposited dunes are elongated parallel to the predominant wind direction during the storm. Snow erosion and deposition occur over 62% and 38% of the area, respectively. Snow deposition volume is more than twice that of erosion (351 m3 versus 158 m3), resulting in a modest increase of 2 ± 1 cm in mean snow depth, indicating a small net mass gain despite large mass relocation. Despite significant …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Trujillo, K Leonard, T Maksym, M Lehning - Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 2016