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Why climate researchers are taking the temperature of mountain snow

James Temple

created: May 14, 2025, 8 a.m. | updated: May 19, 2025, 10:40 a.m.

The pair of climate researchers from the Desert Research Institute (DRI) in Reno, Nevada, skied down to this research plot in the middle of the resort to test out a new way to take the temperature of the Sierra Nevada snowpack. They were equipped with an experimental infrared device that can take readings as it’s lowered down a hole in the snow to the ground. The need for better snowpack temperature data has become increasingly critical for predicting when the water will flow down the mountains, as climate change fuels hotter weather, melts snow faster, and drives rapid swings between very wet and very dry periods. That could jeopardize ongoing efforts to produce the water data and forecasts on which Western communities rely. Rose snow sampler, named after the peak of a Sierra spur that juts into Nevada.

7 months ago: MIT Technology Review