Purdue University
New online toolbox offers many ways to view snow data in the
continental U.S.
Send a link to a friend
[December 14, 2022]
Purdue University’s Midwestern Regional Climate
Center (MRCC) has launched an online interactive
Snowfall Climatology Toolbox that provides easy-to-use, visually
appealing data on annual snowfall, monthly snowfall, number of snow
days, first and last snow dates, and record one-day snowfall for the
entire United States.
Toolbox users can ask questions such as, “What’s our snowiest
month?” “What’s the earliest snowfall we’ve ever had on record?”
“How many times a year do we get a 2-inch or 4-inch snow?” “How much
snow do we get for the whole season?” Or, “How much should we get in
a single month?”
“You can answer these questions quickly and easily with this
toolbox, which has been in the making for more than a year,” said
MRCC director Beth Hall. “We tested the toolbox with some of our
National Weather Service and state climate partners. Then we
improved and updated it with new visualizations and software that
provide a streamlined site for accessing this snowfall data in an
appealing way."
Potential toolbox users include National Weather Service forecasters
and TV meteorologists who seek to put current conditions into
historical perspective. City planners may wish to consult the
toolbox to assess the timing of snow removal assets they’ll need to
keep their streets clear. And outdoor recreational enthusiasts can
find out how much snow to expect based on past records.
“We update this once a year to reflect the last snow season, all the
way back as far as the records go,” said MRCC associate director
Melissa Widhalm.
The toolbox also contains climate “normal” statistics for the most
recent 30-year period with updates every decade. The current climate
“normals” period spans 1991 to 2020, replacing the previous period
of 1981 to 2010. The annual snowfall year runs from July to June
because the typical snowfall season falls in two calendar years.
“We apply stringent missing-data filters to make sure we’re getting
the best available information,” Widhalm said. “Snowfall is hard to
measure.”
Sometimes observers skip making measurements at their stations
because of bad weather.
“We combed through all of this data to make sure that these are
high-quality, long-term data stations. When you look at an average
or a record, you can feel confident that it’s capturing reality,
that it didn’t miss a major event,” she said.
[to top of second column] |
Some users might remember times
when it snowed at a certain location but can’t find any
measurements at the nearest station.
“It might not have snowed at that exact station. It
could have snowed two miles down the road. That’s the nature of
precipitation measurements,” Widhalm said. On the weekend of Nov. 12
and 13 this year, for example, people in downtown West Lafayette,
Indiana, observed an inch or more of snowfall while residents in the
northwest part of the county saw nary a flurry.
The snow data in the toolbox is based on individual stations where
measurements were made by hand every time it snowed. Many of the
stations are part of the ThreadEx network, which, in a statistically
consistent way, extends the record of weather stations that may have
moved around a bit, like the one in Indianapolis.
“This thread of data for Indianapolis goes all the way back to
1883,” Widhalm said.
MRCC’s climatologists have ongoing plans for the toolbox.
“We’re going to have several other snow statistics on version two.
This is our first pass,” Widhalm said. “We prioritized some of our
most commonly requested datasets. Then we are going to push out
another update either later this winter or next snow season.”
The MRCC covers a nine-state area, but when the center moved from
Illinois to Purdue last year, some of the snowfall maps had yet to
be updated with the new climate-normal data. Widhalm decided to
update the snowfall data for the entire U.S. and offer all of it as
part of the toolbox.
In October the MRCC added an online interactive
Freeze Date Tool for specialty crop growers in 25 states to its
array of resources. The MRCC and its project partner, the USDA
Midwest Climate Hub, included states outside of their coverage area
at the request of climatologists working in those regions.
The Freeze Date Tool is especially relevant twice a year when the
weather changes from warm to cold and from cold to warm.
“This snow toolbox is applicable throughout the entire snow season,
from October or November all the way to March or April,” Widhalm
said. “There’s relevant information month after month or for the
season as a whole.”
[Writer: Steve Koppes
Source: Melissa Widhalm] |