Christopher J. Cox, Janet M. Intrieri, Brian Butterworth, Gijs de Boer, Michael R. Gallagher, Jonathan Hamilton, Erik Hulm, Tilden Meyers, Sara M. Morris, Jackson Osborn, P. Ola G. Persson, Benjamin Schmatz, Matthew D. Shupe, James M. Wilczak
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These were along the valley floor near the East River in the vicinity of the unincorporated town of Gothic, Colorado. Energy balance measurements were made at these locations using autonomous, single-level flux towers referred to as Atmospheric Surface Flux Stations (ASFS). The ASFS were deployed on 28 September 2021 at the “Kettle Ponds Annex” site and on 12 October 2021 at the “Avery Picnic” site and operated until 19 July and 21 June 2023, respectively. Measurements included basic meteorology; upward and downward longwave and shortwave radiative fluxes, and subsurface conductive flux, each at 1-minute resolution; 3-d winds from a sonic anemometer and H<sub>2</sub>O/CO<sub>2</sub> from an open-path gas analyser, both at 20 Hz from which sensible, latent heat, and CO<sub>2</sub> fluxes were derived; and profiles of soil properties in the upper 0.5 m (both sites) and temperature profiles through the snow (at Avery Picnic), each reported between 10 min and 6 hours. For most measurements, uptime was 96 % (Kettle Ponds) and 89 % (Avery Picnic), and collectively 1,184 days of data were obtained between the stations. The purpose of this manuscript is to document the ASFS deployment at SPLASH, the data acquisition and post-processing of measurements, and to serve as a guide for interested users of the data sets, which are archived under the Creative Commons 4.0 Public Domain licensing at Zenodo.","PeriodicalId":48747,"journal":{"name":"Earth System Science Data","volume":"38 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":11.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Observations of surface energy fluxes and meteorology in the seasonally snow-covered high-elevation East River Watershed during SPLASH, 2021–2023\",\"authors\":\"Christopher J. Cox, Janet M. Intrieri, Brian Butterworth, Gijs de Boer, Michael R. 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Observations of surface energy fluxes and meteorology in the seasonally snow-covered high-elevation East River Watershed during SPLASH, 2021–2023
Abstract. From autumn 2021 through summer 2023, scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and partners conducted the Study of Precipitation, the Lower Atmosphere, and Surface for Hydrometeorology (SPLASH) campaign in the East River Watershed of Colorado. One objective of SPLASH was to observe the transfer of energy between the atmosphere and the surface, which was done at several locations. Two remote sites were chosen that did not have access to power utilities. These were along the valley floor near the East River in the vicinity of the unincorporated town of Gothic, Colorado. Energy balance measurements were made at these locations using autonomous, single-level flux towers referred to as Atmospheric Surface Flux Stations (ASFS). The ASFS were deployed on 28 September 2021 at the “Kettle Ponds Annex” site and on 12 October 2021 at the “Avery Picnic” site and operated until 19 July and 21 June 2023, respectively. Measurements included basic meteorology; upward and downward longwave and shortwave radiative fluxes, and subsurface conductive flux, each at 1-minute resolution; 3-d winds from a sonic anemometer and H2O/CO2 from an open-path gas analyser, both at 20 Hz from which sensible, latent heat, and CO2 fluxes were derived; and profiles of soil properties in the upper 0.5 m (both sites) and temperature profiles through the snow (at Avery Picnic), each reported between 10 min and 6 hours. For most measurements, uptime was 96 % (Kettle Ponds) and 89 % (Avery Picnic), and collectively 1,184 days of data were obtained between the stations. The purpose of this manuscript is to document the ASFS deployment at SPLASH, the data acquisition and post-processing of measurements, and to serve as a guide for interested users of the data sets, which are archived under the Creative Commons 4.0 Public Domain licensing at Zenodo.
Earth System Science DataGEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARYMETEOROLOGY-METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
CiteScore
18.00
自引率
5.30%
发文量
231
审稿时长
35 weeks
期刊介绍:
Earth System Science Data (ESSD) is an international, interdisciplinary journal that publishes articles on original research data in order to promote the reuse of high-quality data in the field of Earth system sciences. The journal welcomes submissions of original data or data collections that meet the required quality standards and have the potential to contribute to the goals of the journal. It includes sections dedicated to regular-length articles, brief communications (such as updates to existing data sets), commentaries, review articles, and special issues. ESSD is abstracted and indexed in several databases, including Science Citation Index Expanded, Current Contents/PCE, Scopus, ADS, CLOCKSS, CNKI, DOAJ, EBSCO, Gale/Cengage, GoOA (CAS), and Google Scholar, among others.