TECHNICAL NOTES
Jun 24, 2009

Snow Characterization at a City Snow Storage Facility

Publication: Journal of Cold Regions Engineering
Volume 23, Issue 4

Abstract

A field investigation involving snow coring, surveying, and melt water collection was undertaken at a city snow storage facility to characterize the snow and melt water in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The investigation revealed a high content of both salts and sediment within the snow, a pile volume of 500,000m3 , a snow density of 0.630.83g/cm3 , and an average road salt content of 1.2 g/L within the melted snow. The salt within the Poundmaker snow pile, one of Edmonton’s five snow storage sites, represented approximately 1.5–2.0% of the total amount of salt that was used on the city roads during the 2006/2007 winter. Melt water fractionation took place on-site during the spring melt and salt concentrations in the March melt water (early spring) were often more than 10 times the concentration of the bulk snow. Some of the factors affecting the snow and melt water composition included the snow retention time on streets, snow source, weather/climate, sampling technique, and snow site characteristics/operations.

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References

Colbeck, S. C. (1981). “A simulation of the enrichment of atmospheric pollutants in snow cover runoff.” Water Resour. Res., 17(5), 1383–1388.
Goulden, W. (2008). “Pond settling test program, 17th street snow storage site.” Final Rep. No. 4798, City of Edmonton, Engineering Services, Edmonton, Alta., Canada.
Johannessen, M., and Henriksen, A. (1978). “Chemistry of snow meltwater: Changes in concentration during melting.” Water Resour. Res., 14(4), 615–619.
Rabinowitz, B., Vassos, T. D., and Hyslop, W. F. (1988). “The use of snow making for wastewater treatment and disposal.” Proc., 11th Int. Symp. on Wastewater Treatment, Ministère de L’Environnement, Canada, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Reinosdotter, K., and Viklander, M. (2006). “Handling of urban snow with regard to snow quality.” J. Environ. Eng., 132(2), 271–278.
Sansalone, J., and Glenn, D. (2002). “Accretion of pollutants in snow exposed to traffic and winter storm maintenance activities.” J. Environ. Eng., 128(2), 151–166.
Viklander, M. (1997). “Snow quality in urban areas.” Doctoral thesis, Department of Environmental Engineering, Luleå Univ. of Technology, Sweden.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Journal of Cold Regions Engineering
Journal of Cold Regions Engineering
Volume 23Issue 4December 2009
Pages: 136 - 142

History

Received: Aug 20, 2008
Accepted: Jun 18, 2009
Published online: Jun 24, 2009
Published in print: Dec 2009

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Authors

Affiliations

Christina Tatarniuk [email protected]
Research Engineer, City of Edmonton, 2nd Floor, 11404-60 Ave., Edmonton, AB, Canada T6H 1J5 (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]
Robert Donahue
Assistant Professor, 3-068 Markin/CNRL Natural Resources Engineering Facility, Univ. of Alberta Geotechnical Centre, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2W2.
David Sego
Professor, 3-074 Markin/CNRL Natural Resources Engineering Facility, Univ. of Alberta Geotechnical Centre, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2W2.

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