|
||||||
|
|
||||||

The Cold Land Processes Field Experiment (CLPX) was focused on developing quantitative understanding, models, and measurements necessary to extend our local-scale understanding of water fluxes, storage, and transformations to regional and global scales. The experiment emphasized the development of a strong synergism between process-oriented understanding, land surface models, and microwave remote sensing by using a multi-sensor, multi-scale approach. Within a framework of nested study areas ranging from 1 ha to 160,000 km2, intensive ground, airborne, and spaceborne observations were collected. Data collection occured during two seasons: mid-winter, when conditions are generally frozen and dry, and early spring, a transitional period when both frozen and thawed, and dry and wet conditions are widespread. CLPX was conducted in the central Rocky Mountains of the western United States where large physiographic gradients provided a rich array of different terrain, snow, soil, and ecological characteristics.
Between the Winter of 2002 and the Spring of 2003, two Intensive Observation Periods (IOPs) were conducted each year to coincide with both a dry period (February) and a wet period (March). Thus, IOP1 was carried out in February 2002, IOP2 in March 2002, IOP3 in February 2003, and IOP4 in March 2003. To maintain consistency, the IOPs were conducted on the same day-of-year (DOY) schedule.
The specific objectives of CLPX included the following:
For complete information about CLPX, please visit the NASA CLPX Web site.
Related Resources
NASA Cold Land Processes Field Experiment Plan 2001-2004
Additional information regarding CLPX study areas and campaign at NASA's CLPX Web site
NASA CLPX 2002-2003 Field Plan
NASA Cold Land Process Field Experiment Overview and Preliminary Results (PDF)
Improving water and climate forecasts using CLPX data