Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Go ahead, call this research flaky — it truly is

There’s a lot to be gained in studying fresh snowfall

- By Michael Hill

HIGHMOUNT, N.Y. — Capturing snowflakes isn’t as easy as sticking out your tongue.

At least not when you’re trying to capture them for scientific study, which involves isolating the tiniest of crystals on a metal card printed with grid lines and quickly placing them under a microscope to be photograph­ed.

“They are very tiny and they are close to the melting point,” Marco Tedesco of Columbia University said as he set up his microscope beside a snowy field.

Tedesco recently led a team of three researcher­s who trudged through the snowy hills of New York’s Catskill Mountains with cameras, brushes, shovels, a drone and a spectromet­er to collect the most fine-grained details about freshly fallen snowflakes and how they evolve once they settle to the ground.

That data could be used to provide clues to the changing climate and validate the satellite models used for weather prediction­s.

“We’re talking about sub-millimeter objects,” Tedesco said as he stood in shin-deep snow. “Once they get together, they have the power, really, to shape our planet.”

This is the pilot stage of the “X-Snow” project, which organizers hope will involve dozens of volunteers collecting snowflake samples next winter.

Pictures and video from the drone will be used to create a three-dimensiona­l model of the snow’s surface. Postdoctor­al researcher Patrick Alexander trudged though the snow with a wand attached to a backpack spectromet­er that measured how much sunlight the snow on the ground is reflecting, a factor determinin­g how fast it will melt. Later, Alexander got down on his belly in the field to take infrared pictures of the snow’s layers and its grain size.

Tedesco grew up in southern Italy near Naples and never even saw snow until he was 6 years old. But as a scientist, he has logged time studying ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica and has studied snow hydrology in the Rockies and the Dolomites. He said snow in the Eastern U.S. has its own character. It tends to be moister than the powdery snow that falls in higher elevation in the West.

Tedesco hopes that a cadre of committed volunteers in the Catskills and the New York City area can take snowflake and snow depth samples next winter. Volunteers won’t need an expensive backpack spectromet­er, but he recommends a $17 magnifying lens that clips onto their phone, a ruler, a GPS applicatio­n and a print-out version of the postcard-sized metal card Tedesco uses to examine fresh snowflakes.

Enlisting volunteers to take snowflake photos is novel and potentiall­y useful, said Noah Molotch, director of The Center for Water, Earth Science and Technology at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Molotch, who is not involved in the project, said the pictures will give informatio­n about atmospheri­c conditions and could be useful in the study of climate change.

“Snowflakes are among the most beautiful things in nature,” he said. “And the more we can do to document that and get people interested and excited about that, I think is great.”

 ?? Michael Hill The Associated Press ?? Marco Tedesco, a Columbia University researcher, observes snowflakes in Phoenicia, N.Y., on a metal card used to measure flakes.
Michael Hill The Associated Press Marco Tedesco, a Columbia University researcher, observes snowflakes in Phoenicia, N.Y., on a metal card used to measure flakes.

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