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Author Domine F, Gallet Jean-Charles, Bock Josué, Morin Samuel, doi  openurl
  Title Structure, specific surface area and thermal conductivity of the snowpack around Barrow, Alaska Type Journal Article
  Year (down) 2012 Publication J. Geophys. Res. Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 117 Issue Pages D00R14 ST -  
  Keywords Arctic atmospheric chemistry climate contaminants polar snow 0475 Biogeosciences: Permafrost, cryosphere, and high-latitude processes (0702, 0716) 0718 Cryosphere: Tundra (9315) 0736 Cryosphere: Snow (1827, 1863) 0750 Cryosphere: Sea ice (4540) 0792 Cryosphere: Contaminants (0432),  
  Abstract The structure of the snowpack near Barrow was studied in March–April 2009. Vertical profiles of density, specific surface area (SSA) and thermal conductivity were measured on tundra, lakes and landfast ice. The average thickness was 41 cm on tundra and 21 cm on fast ice. Layers observed were diamond dust or recent wind drifts on top, overlaying wind slabs, occasional faceted crystals and melt-freeze crusts, and basal depth hoar layers. The top layer had a SSA between 45 and 224 m2 kg-1. All layers at Barrow had SSAs higher than at many other places because of the geographical and climatic characteristics of Barrow. In particular, a given snow layer was remobilized several times by frequent winds, which resulted in SSA increases each time. The average snow area index (SAI, the dimensionless vertically integrated SSA) on tundra was 3260, higher than in the Canadian High Arctic or in the Alaskan taiga. This high SAI, combined with low snow temperatures, imply that the Barrow snowpack efficiently traps persistent organic pollutants, as illustrated with simple calculations for PCB 28 and PCB 180. The average thermal conductivity was 0.21 Wm-1 K-1, and the average thermal resistance on tundra was 3.25 m2 K W-1. This low value partly explains why the snow-ground interface was cold, around -19°C. The high SAI and low thermal resistance values illustrate the interplay between climate, snow physical properties, and their potential impact on atmospheric chemistry, and the need to describe these relationships in models of polar climate and atmospheric chemistry, especially in a climate change context.  
  Programme 1017  
  Campaign  
  Address  
  Corporate Author Thesis  
  Publisher Place of Publication Editor  
  Language Summary Language Original Title  
  Series Editor Series Title Abbreviated Series Title  
  Series Volume Series Issue Edition  
  ISSN 0148-0227 ISBN Medium  
  Area Expedition Conference  
  Notes Approved yes  
  Call Number Serial 1337  
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