The Cryosphere (Oct 2014)

Blowing snow in coastal Adélie Land, Antarctica: three atmospheric-moisture issues

  • H. Barral,
  • C. Genthon,
  • A. Trouvilliez,
  • C. Brun,
  • C. Amory

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-8-1905-2014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
pp. 1905 – 1919

Abstract

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A total of 3 years of blowing-snow observations and associated meteorology along a 7 m mast at site D17 in coastal Adélie Land are presented. The observations are used to address three atmospheric-moisture issues related to the occurrence of blowing snow, a feature which largely affects many regions of Antarctica: (1) blowing-snow sublimation raises the moisture content of the surface atmosphere close to saturation, and atmospheric models and meteorological analyses that do not carry blowing-snow parameterizations are affected by a systematic dry bias; (2) while snowpack modelling with a parameterization of surface-snow erosion by wind can reproduce the variability of snow accumulation and ablation, ignoring the high levels of atmospheric-moisture content associated with blowing snow results in overestimating surface sublimation, affecting the energy budget of the snowpack; (3) the well-known profile method of calculating turbulent moisture fluxes is not applicable when blowing snow occurs, because moisture gradients are weak due to blowing-snow sublimation, and the impact of measurement uncertainties are strongly amplified in the case of strong winds.