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snow line

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snow line

the altitudinal or latitudinal limit of permanent snow
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

snow line

[′snō ‚līn]
(geography)
A transient line delineating a snow-covered area or altitude.
An area with more than 50% snow cover.
The altitude or geographic line separating areas in which snow melts in summer from areas having perennial ice and snow.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Snow Line

 

the line on the earth’s surface above which the accumulation of solid atmospheric precipitation is greater than the melting and evaporation of the precipitation. A distinction is made between the climatic snow line (the highest position at the end of the summer) and the seasonal, or temporary, line.

The snow line is lower in cold and wet regions and higher in warm and dry ones. In the antarctic it descends to sea level, and in the arctic it is several hundred meters above sea level. It reaches its greatest elevation in the dry tropical and subtropical regions (up to 7 km on the Tibetan Highlands), dropping to 4.4 km at the equator. The elevation of the snow line depends on local conditions; for example, some relief forms may give protection against the wind and promote the accumulation of snow or protect the surface against solar radiation and diminish thawing. The level of the climatic snow line corresponds to the position of the line on a horizontal, unshaded surface. The lower boundary of perennial snowfields is called the orographic snow line; in some places it is significantly lower than the climatic snow line. The Urals, the Taimyr Peninsula, Labrador, and certain other regions of mountain glaciation are entirely below the climatic snow line.

The elevation of the climatic snow line for a given year is determined from observations of the accumulation and melting of snow on glaciers, where the term “firn line” is used. The average elevation of the snow line over a period of years can be defined as (1) on mountain glaciers, the morphological boundary between the accumulation area, which is usually concave in profile, and the ablation area, which is usually convex; (2) the structural boundary between the area of conformably bedded snow and firn in the upper formations and the area where structured ice is dissected by the surface of melting in the lower formations (or, the structural boundary between the bergschrund area in the upper formations and the area of surfacial moraines in the lower formations); or (3) the average elevation of the surface of mountain glaciers, which approximates the elevation of the snow line.

REFERENCES

Tronov, M. V. Voprosy gornoi gliatsiologii. Moscow, 1954.
Tronov, M. V. Faktory oledeneniia i razvitie lednikov. Tomsk, 1972.
Tushinskii. G. K. Ledniki, snezhniki, laviny Sovetskogo Soiuza. Moscow, 1963.

P. A. SHUMSKII [23–1879–]

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
"Planets such as Uranus and Neptune that formed beyond the snow line are composed of tens of percents of water.
The present snow line is expected to rise by 656 to 984ft over the next 30-50 years in Austria.
The Bury rider pounced in the final 100 metres of a climb that finished above the snow line to beat Frenchman Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ) and his Michelton-Scott team-mate Esteban Chaves, putting him 32 seconds clear of Chaves in the standings going into today's rest day.
In just the past decade -- the warmest in Earth's recorded history -- the snow line rose between 1,200 and 1,500 feet in the northern Sierra Nevada.
They are to be found between the tree line and the snow line. His photos showed just that, with an array of flowering plants that everyone just envied without shame.
"We've got customers!" White birds came roaring out of the south, a steady trickle of new geese chasing the snow line in mid-February.
There will be live stream broadcasts from the lower valleys, forests and the snow line glaciers.
It was here that Froome lost the race lead in the Criterium du Dauphine ahead of his ill-fated 2014 Tour, but there were no ghosts from that day on the spectacular hors categorie climb towards the snow line as Team Sky continued to offer the 2013 and 2015 Tour winner strong support.
High Himalayas, Karakoram and the Hindukush ranges with their alpine meadows and permanent snow line, coniferous forests down the sub-mountain scrub, the vast Indus plain merging into the great desert, the coast line and wetlands, all offer a remarkably rich variety of vegetation and associated wildlife including avifauna, both endemic and migratory.
If you don't, for goodness sake stay below the snow line because you might not live to regret it."
Beyond a distance far enough from the sun, called the "snow line," water could exist in the form of ice.
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