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THURSDAY DECEMBER 6 - SNOW COVER AND CLOUDS
We're at the time of year now when snow can turn the landscape white in a matter
of minutes or hours. That transformation complicates the interpretation of
satellite images, simply because both snow and clouds look white from space.
To a novice, there are a few simple ways to tell the difference between them on
satellite images. First, a snowcover will
end abruptly at the edge of a water
body such as a lake or a river, but clouds won't. So a
thin dark line snaking
through a field of white on a satellite image is a river, and the
white is snow,
not clouds. This technique won't work, however, if the water bodies are frozen.
Another way to tell the difference between snow and clouds is by playing a movie
of satellite images over a few hours. The clouds will usually move, but the
snowcover won't.
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