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Dive into the research topics where Louis Sass is active.

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Featured researches published by Louis Sass.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

End‐of‐winter snow depth variability on glaciers in Alaska

Daniel McGrath; Louis Sass; Shad O'Neel; Anthony A. Arendt; Gabriel J. Wolken; Alessio Gusmeroli; Christian Kienholz; Christopher McNeil

A quantitative understanding of snow thickness and snow water equivalent (SWE) on glaciers is essential to a wide range of scientific and resource management topics. However, robust SWE estimates are observationally challenging, in part because SWE can vary abruptly over short distances in complex terrain due to interactions between topography and meteorological processes. In spring 2013, we measured snow accumulation on several glaciers around the Gulf of Alaska using both ground- and helicopter-based ground-penetrating radar surveys, complemented by extensive ground truth observations. We found that SWE can be highly variable (40% difference) over short spatial scales (tens to hundreds of meters), especially in the ablation zone where the underlying ice surfaces are typically rough. Elevation provides the dominant basin-scale influence on SWE, with gradients ranging from 115 to 400 mm/100 m. Regionally, total accumulation and the accumulation gradient are strongly controlled by a glaciers distance from the coastal moisture source. Multiple linear regressions, used to calculate distributed SWE fields, show that robust results require adequate sampling of the true distribution of multiple terrain parameters. Final SWE estimates (comparable to winter balances) show reasonable agreement with both the Parameter-elevation Relationships on Independent Slopes Model climate data set (9–36% difference) and the U.S. Geological Survey Alaska Benchmark Glaciers (6–36% difference). All the glaciers in our study exhibit substantial sensitivity to changing snow-rain fractions, regardless of their location in a coastal or continental climate. While process-based SWE projections remain elusive, the collection of ground-penetrating radar (GPR)-derived data sets provides a greatly enhanced perspective on the spatial distribution of SWE and will pave the way for future work that may eventually allow such projections.


Earth’s Future | 2017

Hypsometric control on glacier mass balance sensitivity in Alaska and northwest Canada

D. McGrath; Louis Sass; Shad O'Neel; Anthony A. Arendt; Christian Kienholz

Glacier hypsometry provides a first-order approach for assessing a glaciers response to climate forcings. We couple the Randolph Glacier Inventory to a suite of in situ observations and climate model output to examine potential change for the ∼27,000 glaciers in Alaska and northwest Canada through the end of the 21st century. By 2100, based on Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) 4.5–8.5 forcings, summer temperatures are predicted to increase between +2.1 and +4.6°C, while solid precipitation (snow) is predicted to decrease by −6 to −11%, despite a +9 to +21% increase in total precipitation. Snow is predicted to undergo a pronounced decrease in the fall, shifting the start of the accumulation season back by ∼1 month. In response to these forcings, the regional equilibrium line altitude (ELA) may increase by +105 to +225 m by 2100. The mass balance sensitivity to this increase is highly variable, with the most substantive impact for glaciers with either limited elevation ranges (often small ( 60%. Our results highlight the first-order control of hypsometry on individual glacier response to climate change, and the variability that hypsometry introduces to a regional response to a coherent climate perturbation.


Climatic Change | 2014

Assessing streamflow sensitivity to variations in glacier mass balance

Shad O’Neel; Eran Hood; Anthony A. Arendt; Louis Sass


Journal of Glaciology | 2017

Geometry, mass balance and thinning at Eklutna Glacier, Alaska: an altitude-mass-balance feedback with implications for water resources

Louis Sass; Michael G. Loso; Jason Geck; Evan E. Thoms; Daniel McGrath


Earth’s Future | 2017

Hypsometric control on glacier mass balance sensitivity in Alaska and northwest Canada: HYPSOMETRIC CONTROL ON MASS BALANCE

D. McGrath; Louis Sass; Shad O'Neel; Anthony A. Arendt; Christian Kienholz


Archive | 2009

Contributions of climate and dynamics to mass wastage and accumulation zone thinning of Eklutna Glacier, Alaska

Louis Sass; Shad O'Neel; Michael G. Loso; Joseph A. MacGregor; Ginny A. Catania; Christian Larsen


The Cryosphere Discussions | 2018

Interannual snow accumulation variability on glaciers derived from repeat, spatially extensive ground-penetrating radar surveys

D. McGrath; Louis Sass; Shad O'Neel; Chris McNeil; Salvatore G. Candela; Emily H. Baker; Hans-Peter Marshall


General Technical Report | 2017

Snow and ice: Chapter 3

Jeremy Littell; Stephanie McAfee; Shad O'Neel; Louis Sass; Evan W. Burgess; Steve Colt; Paul Clark


GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017 | 2017

ASSESSING MASS BALANCE CHANGE AT SOUTH CASCADE GLACIER: IS IT REPRESENTATIVE OF REGIONAL GLACIERS?

Erin Whorton; David Shean; Shad O'Neel; Daniel B. Fagre; Christopher McNeil; Adam M. Clark; Louis Sass; Alex Headman; Erich H. Peitzsch; Daniel McGrath; Emily H. Baker


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

End-of-winter snow depth variability on glaciers in Alaska: SNOW DEPTH ON ALASKAN GLACIERS

Daniel McGrath; Louis Sass; Shad O'Neel; Anthony A. Arendt; Gabriel J. Wolken; Alessio Gusmeroli; Christian Kienholz; Christopher McNeil

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Shad O'Neel

United States Geological Survey

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Christian Kienholz

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Daniel McGrath

United States Geological Survey

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Christopher McNeil

United States Geological Survey

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D. McGrath

Colorado State University

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Alessio Gusmeroli

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Emily H. Baker

United States Geological Survey

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Michael G. Loso

Alaska Pacific University

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