Abstract
Abstract Statistical evidence supports a relationship between the warm-season thermodynamic environment in northeastern Colorado and the antecedent snow conditions in the upstream higher elevations. Above-normal snow storage and longevity reduces the sensible heating of the elevated terrain by increasing the albedo and exerting a stabilizing influence upon the surface layer. It follows that the residual spring snowpack of the Colorado Rockies represents an energy sink to the prevailing west to southwesterly winds of the free atmosphere, which traverse the uplift of the Western Plateau. The abrupt drop in elevation along the Front Range provides for a setting in which a thermal perturbation induced by mountain snow may be communicated to the downstream plains by cooling and perhaps stratifying the mobile elevated residual layer. Statistical and observational evidence suggest that the May and June months that follow a robust and extended snowmelt season are characterized by cooler 700-mb temperatures over Denver, Colorado. The apparent moist convective response to a positive snowmelt anomaly in the lee plains region is for severe weather to develop on average 45 to 50 min earlier, during May and June, than observed during seasons having a negative snow anomaly. Conversely, late springs, which harbor below-average snow, subject the elevated terrain to greater sensible heating. During the May and June months of these “low snow years,” 700-mb environmental conditions over Denver tend to be warmer and drier. Occurring in tandem with these trends are a reduction in May and June rainfall and a lower number of severe hail days on the lee plains. Observations further suggest that during low snow years substantial precipitation deficits extend to synoptic-scale distances downstream.
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