Center for Snow and Avalanche Studies

Swamp Angel Study Site
Swamp Angel Study Plot (subalpine)

Senator Beck Study Site
Senator Beck Study Plot (alpine)

Putney Study Site
Putney Study Plot (summit)

Senator Beck Basin Stream Gauge
Basin Stream Gauge

St Paul Basestation
St. Paul RF Base Station

The Center for Snow & Avalanche Studies serves the mountain science community and regional resource managers by hosting & conducting interdisciplinary research and conducting integrative 24/7/365 monitoring that captures weather, snowpack, radiation, soils, plant community and hydrologic signals of regional climate trends.

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Campaign to Sustain Senator Beck Basin

Fundraising thermometer for $135,000

CSAS and its Senator Beck Basin long-term monitoring study site are in a fight to survive.  In order to continue operations past this season, and into our Fiscal Year 2012/2013, we need to raise $135,000 by June 30, 2012.We have already received pledges, but need more stakeholder agencies to step forward!

Why should CSAS get funded?
Federal and state natural resource and land managers have a very real stake in the data that CSAS is producing. Sustained Senator Beck Basin data and mountain system monitoring will help managers fulfill their agency's climate change adaptation mandates and provide insights into changes in ecosystem services.   Collective stakeholder funding of CSAS's operation of Senator Beck Basin offers agencies a cost-effective opportunity to obtain unique data and research results, with broad applications.

Why isn't CSAS funded by more foundations or by NSF?
Although CSAS is a 501(c)(3), not-for-profit research organization, we are unable to compete for most private foundations' funding because we are neither an activist or an advocacy organization, proposing "solutions" to climate change, and because our fundamental need is for general (Senator Beck Basin) operations funding for long-term monitoring.  Similarly, the National Science Foundation seeks to fund 3-4 year, "new" science research projects (such as our original dust-on-snow research effort).  Unfortunately, the CSAS's long-term mountain system monitoring program does not match up with NSF's calls for funding proposals.  The irony, of course, is that "new" climate science will rely on long-term datasets that have effectively captured the signals of regional climate change.  In the absence of private foundation or NSF funding, CSAS must turn to "stakeholders" - resource management agencies, industry, and even citizen funders - to sustain the long-term data collection that scientists and resource managers will need to understand how climate changes are actually affecting mountain systems.  

What can Senator Beck Basin tell us about the big picture?
Alpine mountain systems are known to be highly sensitive to their regional climatology and are an essential source of water supplies.  The Senator Beck Basin Study Area, a 720 acre alpine catchment at the headwaters of the Uncompahgre River, in the western San Juan Mountains, constitutes an unique "mountain system monitoring" and research site because of its location adjacent to and immediately downwind of the Colorado Plateau, within the Upper Colorado River Basin, and very near to the headwaters of the Rio Grande River.  CSAS has invested in purpose-built, high-quality instrumentation and infrastructure capturing a broad set of integrative measurements, 24/7/365, monitoring the Basin's essential system behaviors at a tractable spatial scale.  Already, this "single site" has produced dust-on-snow science with regional, national, and global ramifications, been a venue for development and testing of new snow science technologies, generated unique datasets that are now informing improvements to snow hydrology models and snowmelt forecasting, hosted several successful PhD and MSc candidates from a variety of mountain science disciplines, and supported new insights about how global changes in atmospheric processes may actually affect mountain systems.  In short, Senator Beck Basin data and research have meaning and application well beyond the local watershed.

Who are you approaching for funding?
In the absence of general operating support for Senator Beck Basin from private foundations or the National Science Foundation, we are proposing that agency stakeholders - USGS, Bureau of Reclamation, NOAA, Department of Energy, US Army Corp of Engineers, USFS, NASA, and State and regional water management agencies - provide funding by contracting CSAS to sustain our long-term data collection and monitoring at the Senator Beck Basin Study Area.  Their funds will be complemented by additional general operating support from Friends of the CSAS, the outdoor industry, and from researchers utilizing our facilities and data.

As opposed to the costs of "big" climate science, $135,000 shared annually among several agencies may represent a cost-effective option for acquiring otherwise scarce long-term data and field-based observations.  

The details:
Agency funding appeal memo (1page pdf)
Budget (pdf)
Data set
History
Board and Staff

Executive Director Chris Landry is available at clandry@snowstudies.org, or (970) 387-5080. 

Center for Snow and Avalanche Studies
1428 Greene Street, #103, PO Box 190
Silverton, CO 81433 USA
Phone: 970.387.5080