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Mountain snowfall flakes out
Study: Fewer inches equals less water

Los Angeles Times
Published September 12, 2004

STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, Colo. -- Every snowflake tells
a story to the scientists who sift for clues
among the ice crystals.

And the one being told by the flakes that fall
each winter near the summit of Mt. Werner here
sounds ominous for the future of water in the
drought-parched West.

Along the western slope of the Rockies, in a
laboratory 10,500 feet above sea level, a team of
atmospheric researchers has spent the past decade
deciphering a deeper meaning from the blizzards
that blanket the Steamboat ski resort in its
famously pillowy "champagne powder."

They have skimmed snow clouds with screens to
size up their icy content. They have zapped
falling flakes with lasers to record digital
images of the hexagonal shapes. They have
captured crystals in a contraption that melts
them with a heat gun and measures the mass of the
water droplets.

And they have come to a provocative conclusion:
Air pollution is reducing mountain snowfall, the
wellspring of drinking water for Los Angeles, Las
Vegas and much of the urban West.

Storm clouds packed with microscopic particles
from diesel trucks, coal-burning power plants and
cow manure produce far less snow than clouds
comparatively free of pollution, the scientists
from the University of Nevada's Desert Research
Institute have determined.

In a study of two otherwise identical storms
published earlier this year--one dirty and one
clean--they found that the system sullied by
specks of air pollution snowed 50 percent less.
And the snow that did fall contained 25 percent
less water.

"The difference can be as much as 50 percent in
the mass of a snowflake," said Douglas Lowenthal,
who conducted the study with colleague Randy
Borys. "When you aggregate all those snowflakes,
you can have a pretty significant effect."

All clouds are full of aerosols, or tiny
particles suspended in the air. Most of the
little bits are tossed into the air naturally,
kicked up by sea spray, dust storms, wildfires
and volcanoes.

But human activities are thickening the particle
stew, particularly in the air above
industrialized nations.

Ten percent of the particles now in the air came
from man-made causes such as the burning of
fossil fuels, scientists estimate. The majority
of the particles are so small that they are not
restricted by any environmental regulations.

Numerous scientific researchers are showing that
pollution particles in clouds can reduce
precipitation. But the Colorado snowflake studies
provide some of the most detailed evidence yet
that it is happening.


Copyright � 2004, Chicago Tribune 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0409120285sep12,1,1457843.story




                
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