TY - JOUR
T1 - Meteorological conditions at Racetrack playa, death valley National Park
T2 - Implications for rock production and transport
AU - Lorenz, Ralph D.
AU - Jackson, Brian K.
AU - Barnes, Jason W.
AU - Spitale, Joseph N.
AU - Radebaugh, Jani
AU - Baines, Kevin H.
PY - 2011/12
Y1 - 2011/12
N2 - Three decades of weather records at meteorological stations near Death Valley National Park are analyzed in an attempt to gauge the frequency of conditions that might form and erase the famous trails of wind-blown rocks in the mud of Racetrack Playa. Trail formation requires the playa to be wet, followed by strong winds and/or freezing conditions. Weather records are compared with a limited set of meteorological data that were acquired in situ at the playa over three winters and that indicate freezing on 50, 29, and 15 nights during the winters of 2007/08-09/10, respectively, as well as with the hydrological condition of the playa as determined by time-lapse cameras that observed flooding over ~1, ~5, and ~40 days, respectively, during those winters. Measurements at the nearby Panamint and Hunter Mountain stations are found to be a useful, if imperfect (~50%), indicator of Racetrack Playa conditions and give some features of Racetrack Playa's micrometeorological behavior. Wind speed probability distributions suggest that winds that are fast enough to cause unassisted rock motion are rare and therefore that freezing of water on the playa has a role in a significant fraction of movement events.
AB - Three decades of weather records at meteorological stations near Death Valley National Park are analyzed in an attempt to gauge the frequency of conditions that might form and erase the famous trails of wind-blown rocks in the mud of Racetrack Playa. Trail formation requires the playa to be wet, followed by strong winds and/or freezing conditions. Weather records are compared with a limited set of meteorological data that were acquired in situ at the playa over three winters and that indicate freezing on 50, 29, and 15 nights during the winters of 2007/08-09/10, respectively, as well as with the hydrological condition of the playa as determined by time-lapse cameras that observed flooding over ~1, ~5, and ~40 days, respectively, during those winters. Measurements at the nearby Panamint and Hunter Mountain stations are found to be a useful, if imperfect (~50%), indicator of Racetrack Playa conditions and give some features of Racetrack Playa's micrometeorological behavior. Wind speed probability distributions suggest that winds that are fast enough to cause unassisted rock motion are rare and therefore that freezing of water on the playa has a role in a significant fraction of movement events.
KW - Atmosphere-land interaction
KW - Automatic weather stations
KW - Extreme events
KW - Freeze events
KW - Rainfall
KW - Wind gusts
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84856197488&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1175/JAMC-D-11-075.1
DO - 10.1175/JAMC-D-11-075.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84856197488
SN - 1558-8424
VL - 50
SP - 2361
EP - 2375
JO - Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
JF - Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
IS - 12
ER -