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REGIONAL SNOWFALL PATTERNS IN THE HIGH, ARID ANDES
Authors:MATHIAS VUILLE  CASPAR AMMANN
Institution:(1) Department of Geosciences, Morrill Science Center, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, 01003-5820, U.S.A
Abstract:Since 1990 the project rsquoClimate Change in the Arid Andeslsquo has been focusing on past climate and environmental conditions in the high mountain range of the north Chilean Andes (18° S–28° S). The extreme aridity of this region is shown by the absence of glaciers, even at the highest altitudes above 6700 m a.s.l. More knowledge of the present climatic situation is needed to interpret the proxy data of different paleoarchives in this transition belt between tropical and extratropical circulation. Precipitation events in this arid region are mainly registered during southern hemisphere summer, when the ITCZ reaches its southernmost position. Winter precipitation (snowfall) has so far not been considered an important factor in the hydrologic system of the area, because snow is seldom accurately registered by climatic stations. To fill this gap in our information, winter snowfall activity was analysed for a period of 6 years using digital NOAA/AVHRR satellite data. The results show that snowfall during winter (May–September) is a quite regular phenomenon, mainly linked to northward displacements or cut-offs of cold air-masses from the Pacific. The areal distribution of snowfall is determined by the synoptic situation that produces precipitation. During cold frontal events, snowfall is most frequent in the southernmost part of the research area and on the western Chilean side of the Andes. Cold air that has been cut off from the westerlies often interacts with warmer and more humid air over the continent and therefore gives rise to a different snowfall distribution, with the greatest snowfall frequency between 23° S–25° S, decreasing polewards as well as towards the equator. These two winter snowfall patterns show that reconstruction of paleoclimate has to take into account the different mechanisms that may cause precipitation in the research area. Intensification of winter precipitation (e.g., the west wind zone) can induce largely different precipitation patterns, depending on which mechanisms (cut-offs, cold-fronts or both) within the west wind zone are strengthened.
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