Abstract

Abstract. The continental divide along the spine of the Canadian Rockies in southwestern Canada is a critical headwater region for hydrological drainages to the Pacific, Arctic, and Atlantic oceans. Major flooding events are typically attributed to heavy precipitation on its eastern side due to upslope (easterly) flows. Precipitation can also occur on the western side of the divide when moisture originating from the Pacific Ocean encounters the west-facing slopes of the Canadian Rockies. Often, storms propagating across the divide result in significant precipitation on both sides. Meteorological data over this critical region are sparse, with few stations located at high elevations. Given the importance of all these types of events, the Storms and Precipitation Across the continental Divide Experiment (SPADE) was initiated to enhance our knowledge of the atmospheric processes leading to storms and precipitation on either side of the continental divide. This was accomplished by installing specialized meteorological instrumentation on both sides of the continental divide and carrying out manual observations during an intensive field campaign from 24 April–26 June 2019. On the eastern side, there were two field sites: (i) at Fortress Mountain Powerline (2076 m a.s.l.) and (ii) at Fortress Junction Service, located in a high-elevation valley (1580 m a.s.l.). On the western side, Nipika Mountain Resort, also located in a valley (1087 m a.s.l.), was chosen as a field site. Various meteorological instruments were deployed including two Doppler light detection and ranging instruments (lidars), three vertically pointing micro rain radars, and three optical disdrometers. The three main sites were nearly identically instrumented, and observers were on site at Fortress Mountain Powerline and Nipika Mountain Resort during precipitation events to take manual observations of precipitation type and microphotographs of solid particles. The objective of the field campaign was to gather high-temporal-frequency meteorological data and to compare the different conditions on either side of the divide to study the precipitation processes that can lead to catastrophic flooding in the region. Details on field sites, instrumentation used, and collection methods are discussed. Data from the study are publicly accessible from the Federated Research Data Repository at https://doi.org/10.20383/101.0221 (Thériault et al., 2020). This dataset will be used to study atmospheric conditions associated with precipitation events documented simultaneously on either side of a continental divide. This paper also provides a sample of the data gathered during a precipitation event.

Highlights

  • Precipitation over the Canadian Western Cordillera has high spatial variability and is influenced by the complex orography of the region and its interaction with air masses from a variety of sources (Stoelinga et al, 2013)

  • Fortress Mountain Powerline (FMP) was chosen as it is the primary field site in the Canadian Rockies Hydrological Observatory, operated by the University of Saskatchewan Centre for Hydrology, and is already well-instrumented with hydrometeorological equipment

  • Two Pluvio precipitation gauges placed in a singleAlter shield were used; one was previously installed at FMP by the University of Saskatchewan Centre for Hydrology, and the other was installed on 24 April 2019 at Fortress Junction Service (FJS) (OTT Pluvio2) for the duration of the SPADE field campaign (Fig. 3f)

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Summary

Introduction

Precipitation over the Canadian Western Cordillera has high spatial variability and is influenced by the complex orography of the region and its interaction with air masses from a variety of sources (Stoelinga et al, 2013). The SPADE domain spans both the western and eastern sides of the continental divide in the Canadian Rockies (Fig. 1) from 117 to 114◦ W longitude and 50 to 52◦ N latitude This region is subject to spatially variable weather conditions, with large orographic features acting as the major catalyst for precipitation. The objective of this paper is to describe the methods of data collection during the SPADE project It fills in key gaps in the otherwise well-instrumented hydrometeorological measurements and long-standing research conducted at Fortress Mountain, a Canadian Rockies Hydrological Observatory (https://research-groups.usask.ca/hydrology/ science/research-facilities/crho.php#Overview, last access: 16 June 2020).

Site description
Instruments used
Weather station
HMP155
WXT520
HOBO T–RH
Precipitation gauges
HOBO tipping-bucket rain gauge
Davis Instruments tipping-bucket rain gauge
Pluvio
Geonor
Manual observations and microphotography
Laser-optical disdrometer
Micro rain radar
3.10 Doppler lidar
Overview
Storm 4–5 May 2019
Final remarks
Findings
24 Apr–26 Jun 2019 24 Apr–26 Jun 2019 station
Full Text
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