Minimum temperatures, diurnal temperature ranges, and temperature inversions in limestone sinkholes of different sizes and shapes

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Abstract

Air temperature data from five enclosed limestone sinkholes of various sizes and shapes on the Hetzkogel Plateau near Lunz, Austria (1300 m MSL), have been analyzed to determine the effect of sinkhole geometry on temperature minima, diurnal temperature ranges, temperature inversion strengths, and vertical temperature gradients. Data were analyzed for a non-snow-covered October night and for a snow-covered December night when the temperature fell as low as -28.5°C. A surprising finding is that temperatures were similar in two sinkholes with very different drainage areas and depths. A three-layer model was used to show that the skyview factor is the most important topographic parameter controlling cooling for basins in this size range in nearcalm, clear-sky conditions and that the cooling slows when net longwave radiation at the floor of the sinkhole is nearly balanced by the ground heat flux. © 2004 American Meteorological Society.

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APA

Whiteman, C. D., Haiden, T., Posphical, B., Eisenbach, S., & Steinacker, R. (2004). Minimum temperatures, diurnal temperature ranges, and temperature inversions in limestone sinkholes of different sizes and shapes. Journal of Applied Meteorology, 43(8), 1224–1236. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0450(2004)043<1224:MTDTRA>2.0.CO;2

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