When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Upper Colorado Snowpack Database - Water Data

    www.snowpack.water-data.com/uppercolorado/index.php?getall=1

    Upper Colorado River Basin SWE and TP Averages are from the 30 year average calculated from data between 10/01/1990 and 09/30/2020. Abbreviations Legend: -- indicates the either no measurement taken or data not received. SWE = Snow Water Equivalent.

  3. Colorado SNOTEL Snowpack Update Report - NRCS National Water and...

    wcc.sc.egov.usda.gov/reports/UpdateReport.html?report...

    snow water equivalent at selected SNOTEL sites in or near the basin compared to the median (or average) of the maximum seasonal values observed each water year for those sites. Contact your state water supply staff for assistance.

  4. Colorado Snowpack - National Weather Service

    www.weather.gov/bou/co_snowpack

    Colorado/Westwide Static Maps have been discontinued. NRCS SNOWPACK SWE TIMESERIES GRAPHS (below or click here) NRCS Basin and Subbasin (interactive) Graphs (below or click here) Statewide and Basins in North Central Colorado. SNOTEL sites. Subbasins in the. South Platte Basin. Subbasins in the North Platte Basin. and just West of the Divide.

  5. Colorado SNOTEL Snow/Precipitation Update Report - NRCS National...

    wcc.sc.egov.usda.gov/reports/UpdateReport.html?report=Colorado

    The SNOW WATER EQUIVALENT represents the depth of water in the snowpack, if the snowpack were melted, expressed in inches. The WATER YEAR-TO-DATE-PRECIPITATION represents total precipitation since October 1st, expressed in inches.

  6. Colorado Snow Survey Products

    www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov/ftpref/support/states/CO/products

    Welcome to the Colorado Snow Survey's new snowpack data dashboard! Select a Colorado station or basin in the map to display the current snowpack conditions in the graph section below. Different hydrologic scales, from individual stations to river basins, can be displayed on the map by using the dropdown menu located at the top of the map.

  7. Upper Colorado River Basin SNOTEL Snow/Precipitation Update...

    wcc.sc.egov.usda.gov/reports/UpdateReport.html?report=Upper...

    The SNOW WATER EQUIVALENT represents the depth of water in the snowpack, if the. snowpack were melted, expressed in inches. The WATER YEAR-TO-DATE-PRECIPITATION represents total precipitation since October 1st, expressed in inches. Contact your state water supply staff for assistance.

  8. Snowpack - Natural Resources Conservation Service

    www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/wcc/home/snowClimate...

    Snowpack: Snow Water Equivalent (SWE) and Snow Depth Reports. Update Reports - Current and monthly snowpack, precipitation, reservoir, and streamflow data. Basin Data Report - Select "Snowpack" report type. Daily SWE Report, By SNOTEL Site: Current Water Year | Historic. Monthly SWE Report, By SNOTEL Site: Current Water Year | Historic

  9. Snow Reports - SNOWTEL Locations | Colorado River Basin

    www.coloradoriverdistrict.org/snow-reports

    Get easy access to SNOTEL locations showing the latest snowpack levels throughout the Colorado River Basin. SNOWTEL is an automated system of snowpack and related climate sensors operated by the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), US Department of Agriculture.

  10. Snowpack - coloradoriverscience.org

    coloradoriverscience.org/Snowpack

    In the Colorado River Basin, snow is a key component of the hydrologic cycle. Most of the basin’s annual streamflow—about 70%—originates as snowmelt. The basin's seasonal snowpack acts as an enormous reservoir that builds up and releases every winter and spring; it has an average seasonal peak volume of about 18 million acre-feet in the ...

  11. Colorado Snowpack Starting 2023 at Above Normal Levels in Most...

    www.nrcs.usda.gov/.../colorado-snowpack-starting-2023-at-above

    Denver, CO – January 6th, 2023 – Aided by a significant series of storms starting after Christmas and continuing into the New Year most major basins in the state are now holding well above normal amounts of snow water equivalent (SWE) for this time of year.