Snowmobile impacts on snowpack physical and mechanical properties
Fassnacht, Steven R.
Heath, Jared T.
Venable, Niah B. H.
Elder, Kelly J.
12, 3: 1121 - 1135
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-12-1121-2018
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/7070
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/7070
Fassnacht, Steven R.; Heath, Jared T.; Venable, Niah B. H.; Elder, Kelly J., 2018: Snowmobile impacts on snowpack physical and mechanical properties. In: The Cryosphere, Band 12, 3: 1121 - 1135, DOI: 10.5194/tc-12-1121-2018.
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Snowmobile use is a popular form of winter recreation
in Colorado, particularly on public lands. To examine
the effects of differing levels of use on snowpack properties,
experiments were performed at two different areas, Rabbit
Ears Pass near Steamboat Springs and at Fraser Experimental
Forest near Fraser, Colorado USA. Differences between
no use and varying degrees of snowmobile use (low, medium
and high) on shallow (the operational standard of 30 cm) and
deeper snowpacks (120 cm) were quantified and statistically
assessed using measurements of snow density, temperature,
stratigraphy, hardness, and ram resistance from snow pit profiles.
A simple model was explored that estimated snow density
changes from snowmobile use based on experimental results.
Snowpack property changes were more pronounced for
thinner snow accumulations. When snowmobile use started
in deeper snow conditions, there was less difference in density,
hardness, and ram resistance compared to the control
case of no snowmobile use. These results have implications
for the management of snowmobile use in times and places
of shallower snow conditions where underlying natural resources
could be affected by denser and harder snowpacks.
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