Mammoth Lakes, Calif. — The majestic beauty of California’s Sierra Nevada never fails to impress. But the mountain range, which stretches hundreds of miles, is much more than a stunning vista. It’s a linchpin that helps make living in an arid state possible.
That’s because one of California’s most important water supplies is melted snow. Each spring and summer, the Sierra sends runoff down its slopes that recharges rivers and reservoirs, allowing crops to be irrigated and drinking glasses to be filled.
Knowing with precision how much snow has accumulated is crucial for farmers and water managers.
That’s where a mapping project at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory known as the Airborne Snow Observatory comes in. Using measurements gathered by specialized instruments on a plane, scientists have been able to gain an unprecedented understanding of the amount of water present in the Sierra’s snow.
This year, after California’s very wet winter, the totals have been remarkably big.
Using the NASA data, we compared this year's snowpack with that of 2015, when the state was in the grip of drought (which, at least officially, is still ongoing). In the interactive maps below, the white areas had a meter, or 3.3 feet, or more of snow on the ground in March.
High in the mountains, this year's snow blankets the ground in layers tens of feet deep in many places. In 2015, almost none of this area had snow that thick:
Burro
Pass
The Slide
Finger Peaks
11,498’
PIUTE CANYON
Arndt
Lake
Rock Island
Lake
SUICIDE RIDGE
Whorl Mountain
12,033’
SPILLER CREEK CANYON
Crazy Mule
Gulch
23.8 feet
15.1 feet
deep
Bath
Mountain
Doghead
Peak
ROCK CANYON
Quarry Peak
11,161’
Slide
Mountain
Doe
Lake
14.6 feet
Tallulah Lake
MATTERHORN CANYON
Surprise
Lake
Sister
Lake
1/4 MILE
Smedberg
Lake
Benson
Pass
Crazy Mule
Gulch
15.1 feet
deep
Bath
Mountain
Doghead
Peak
ROCK CANYON
Quarry Peak
11,161’
Slide
Mountain
Doe
Lake
14.6 feet
Tallulah Lake
Surprise
Lake
Sister
Lake
1/4 MILE
Burro
Pass
The Slide
Finger Peaks
11,498’
PIUTE CANYON
Arndt
Lake
Rock Island
Lake
SUICIDE RIDGE
Whorl Mountain
12,033’
SPILLER CREEK CANYON
Crazy Mule
Gulch
12.6 feet
3.9 feet
deep
Bath
Mountain
Doghead
Peak
ROCK CANYON
Quarry Peak
11,161’
Slide
Mountain
Doe
Lake
3.4 feet
Tallulah Lake
MATTERHORN CANYON
Surprise
Lake
Sister
Lake
1/4 MILE
Smedberg
Lake
Benson
Pass
Crazy Mule
Gulch
3.9 feet
deep
Bath
Mountain
Doghead
Peak
ROCK CANYON
Quarry Peak
11,161’
Slide
Mountain
Doe
Lake
3.4 feet
Tallulah Lake
Surprise
Lake
Sister
Lake
1/4 MILE
At the lower elevations around the Hetch Hetchy reservoir, which collects most of the melting snow runoff in this area and supplies water to millions, there was almost no snow to speak of in 2015. This year, the snowpack reached down to within a few hundred feet of the reservoir's edge:
TILTILL MOUNTAIN
Mount
Gibson
TILTILL
VALLEY
7.2 feet
Rancheria
Falls
Hetch Hetchy
Reservoir
Le Conte
Point
RANCHERIA MOUNTAIN
1/4 MILE
PATE
VALLEY
TILTILL
VALLEY
Rancheria
Falls
Hetch Hetchy
Reservoir
Le Conte
Point
1/4 MILE
TILTILL MOUNTAIN
Mount
Gibson
TILTILL
VALLEY
Rancheria
Falls
Hetch Hetchy
Reservoir
Le Conte
Point
RANCHERIA MOUNTAIN
1/4 MILE
PATE
VALLEY
TILTILL
VALLEY
Rancheria
Falls
Hetch Hetchy
Reservoir
Le Conte
Point
1/4 MILE
These maps show parts of the Tuolumne Basin, which in late February was blanketed by 1.2 million acre-feet of snow-water equivalent, or the amount of water that would result if the snow were instantly melted.
That's about 10 times the amount as the same time in 2015, said Thomas Painter, a snow hydrologist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California Institute of Technology, who leads the NASA program.
He added, “And it keeps on coming.”
The pattern has held for the central Sierra region as a whole:
200% of
average
1983
Maximum
Snowpack
this year
100
Average
2016
2015
Minimum
0
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
1983
Maximum
200% of
April 1 Average
Snowpack
this year
Average
100
2016
2015
Minimum
0
Jan.
F
M
A
M
June
The airborne observatory has been detecting snow depths in the mountains ranging from a few feet at lower elevations to more than 70 feet in avalanche areas.
“Some of the snowdrifts have faces of 25 to 40 feet,” said Jeffrey Payne, a water resources manager at the Friant Water Authority who has analyzed the NASA data. “So we’ve got some pretty serious snow.”
Ski resorts that typically close in the spring are so deeply blanketed that they have been making plans to extend their seasons.
Officials at Squaw Valley, in the Lake Tahoe area, and Mammoth Mountain, below, in the eastern Sierra, said they anticipated staying open well into summer.
The snow observatory project, which began flights over the Sierra in 2013, is a groundbreaking initiative in California, where aging infrastructure, a warming climate and rapid population growth have made water management a high-stakes job.
For decades, state officials have estimated snowpack levels by extrapolating from ground-based data gathered at points across the range.
The margin of error, unsurprisingly, has been huge.
“It’s like turning on your TV screen and four of the pixels turn on, and you can only use those four every single time you watch ‘Breaking Bad,’” Dr. Painter said.
Every one to four weeks, the NASA crew circles above the Sierra Nevada in an airplane that fires laser pulses toward the ground. By measuring how fast the pulses bounce back, the scientists are able to create detailed topographical maps.
Compare those with maps of the mountains when bare and factor in the snow’s density, and they can tell how much water is present.
With the view from the sky, Dr. Painter said, “we turn on the whole screen, every pixel.”
The observatory also measures the reflection of sunlight off the snow, which is critical to understanding how much energy the snow absorbs and how fast it could melt.
Mr. Payne of the Friant Water Authority, which manages water for agricultural land in the San Joaquin Valley, said the new snow data was game-changing for farmers, who will be able to plan their crops with greater confidence.
“We need to be smarter about how we approach water resource management,” Mr. Payne said. “And this new technology is sort of a beacon of hope.”
For now, the observatory is taking measurements for most of the central Sierra Nevada. The hope is to get more buy-in from state officials and expand to the whole range, Dr. Painter said.
It has been an increasingly easy sell.
“It really has gotten to the point now where we don’t call on anyone,” Dr. Painter said. “We are simply responding to phone calls.”