Abstract

Abstract Using results taken from a finescale (25 km) regional modeling simulation for the summer of 1999, intraseasonal variations in the climatological summertime hydrologic cycle over the southwestern United States are described for two previously identified spatiotemporal precipitation patterns. Over the western portion of the Rocky Mountain plateau, centered on eastern Utah and western Colorado, columnar moisture divergence associated with precipitation is balanced by a combination of seasonal-mean convective moisture convergence and anomalous upper-air (>4 km) large-scale moisture convergence. The actual precipitating events themselves are predicated upon the anomalous upper-level advection of water vapor into the precipitating region; absent this large-scale advection at upper levels, vertical diffusion of moisture into the atmosphere balances large-scale divergence at midlevels, with little precipitation occurring. The anomalous large-scale advection during precipitating events is due primarily to...

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