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Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury...

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Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York
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Page 1: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water

in a drainage basinTodd Rayne and Dave TewksburyHamilton College Clinton, New York

Page 2: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Goals of the exercise:

• Relationship between linear and volume measurements

• Spatial variability of snow depth

• Snow depth and water content

• Representative sampling

• Error analysis

• and GIS experience, naturally!

• Used as a lab exercise in a spring semester 200-level hydrogeology course with no GIS prerequisite.

• Students have completed two introductory GIS exercises on their own.

Page 3: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Field area is athletic fields and adjacent golf course

Field materials: GPS unit, meter stick, clipboard

Time allotted to measure snow depths: ~90 minutes

Page 4: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.
Page 5: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Example of good sampling distribution

Page 6: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Example of uneven sampling distribution. Note the linear pattern that shows their route.

Page 7: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

1. Extract ground elevations at sampling points from DEM and add snow depths in attribute table to create snow elevations.2. Create polyline boundary to limit the surface extent.3. Contour snow elevations

Page 8: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Volume map of study area. Red is gain of volume; blue is loss of volume. Whyare some of the cells blue when the snow cover is continuous?

Page 9: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Same measurement points with deeper (0.3 m) snow.

Page 10: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Snow volume in an area with unevenly distributed sampling locations.

Page 11: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

Follow-up (usually the following day or week):

• Troubleshooting GIS problems

• Summation of snow volume values in red cells

• Measurement of snow density

• Conversion of snow volume to water volume

• Discussion of why all the cells in the study area are not red

• Discussion of snow accumulation and hydrology

Page 12: Using GIS to estimate the volume of snow and water in a drainage basin Todd Rayne and Dave Tewksbury Hamilton College Clinton, New York.

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