Abstract

The aim of this work is to understand aerosol transfers to the snowpack in the Spanish Pyrenees (Southern Europe) by determining their episodic mass-loading and composition, and to retrieve their regional impacts regarding optical properties and modification of snow melting. Regular aerosol monitoring has been performed during three consecutive years. Complementarily, short campaigns have been carried out to collect dust-rich snow samples. Atmospheric samples have been chemically characterized in terms of elemental composition and, in some cases, regarding their mineralogy. Snow albedo has been determined in different seasons along the campaign, and temporal variations of snow-depth from different observatories have been related to concentration of impurities in the snow surface. Our results noticed that aerosol flux in the Central Pyrenees during cold seasons (from November to May, up to 12–13 g m−2 of insoluble particles overall accumulated) is much higher than the observed during the warm period (from June to October, typically around 2.1–3.3 g m−2). Such high values observed during cold seasons were driven by the impact of severe African dust episodes. In absence of such extreme episodes, aerosol loadings in cold and warm season appeared comparable. Our study reveals that mineral dust particles from North Africa are a major driver of the aerosol loading in the snowpack in the southern side of the Central Pyrenees. Field data revealed that the heterogeneous spatial distribution of impurities on the snow surface led to differences close to 0.2 on the measured snow albedo within very short distances. Such impacts have clear implications for modelling distributed energy balance of snow and predicting snow melting from mountain headwaters.

Highlights

  • Aerosols are studied because of their impacts on human health [1,2], ecosystems [3,4], and climate [5,6]

  • We study the relationship between the concentration of impurities on the snow surface, many of them acting as light absorbing particles (LAPs) [12] and the observed inter-seasonal and intra-seasonal snow albedo variations

  • Aerosol deposition in the period June 2016–June 2019 in the Central Pyrenees has been characterized characterized by relatively stable fluxes during the warm season, ranging from by relatively stable fluxes during the warm season, ranging from 2.1 to 3.3 g m−2

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosols are studied because of their impacts on human health [1,2], ecosystems [3,4], and climate [5,6]. The snow darkening caused by black carbon [7,8,9] or mineral dust [10,11,12] deposition encompasses a decrease of albedo, overall modifying the radiative balance of these surfaces and affecting the regional climate. These phenomena have a clear impact over the hydrological cycle, as snow melting processes can be accelerated [12,13,14,15,16]. Snow in the Pyrenees is critical for the water resources availability of the dry lowlands [21] and a deeper understanding of the effect of snow impurities on snow is necessary for improving estimations on the amount and timing of the spring freshet

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