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:''This article refers to the natural event. For other uses, see [[Avalanche (disambiguation)]]''
{{Short description|Rapid flow of a mass of snow down a slope}}
[[Image:Avalanche on Everest.JPG|thumb|right|300px|A powder snow avalanche in the [[Himalayas]] near [[Mount Everest]].]]
{{About|the sliding of large masses of snow|rock and debris avalanches|Landslide|other uses}}
[[Image:AvalancheToe.jpg|thumb|right|300px|The toe of an avalanche in [[Alaska]]'s [[Kenai Fjords National Park|Kenai Fjords]].]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
[[Image:Lawine.jpg|thumb|right|300px|A [[Snow|powder snow]] avalanche]]
[[File:Avalanche on Everest.JPG|thumb|upright=1.25|A powder snow avalanche in the [[Himalayas]] near [[Mount Everest]].]]
[[File:Ligne Saint-Gervais - Vallorcine - avalanche 2006 - 08.jpg|thumb|Heavy equipment in action after an avalanche has interrupted service on the [[Saint-Gervais–Vallorcine railway]] in [[Haute-Savoie]], France (2006).]]
[[File:AvalancheToe.jpg|thumb|The terminus of an avalanche in [[Alaska]]'s [[Kenai Fjords National Park|Kenai Fjords]].]]
[[File:Alaska - Miscellaneous (Airscapes) - NARA - 23933547.jpg|thumb|right|[[Alaska Railroad]] track blocked by a snow slide]]
An '''avalanche''' is a rapid flow of [[snow]] down a [[Grade (slope)|slope]], such as a hill or mountain.<ref>{{cite web|title=Snow Avalanches {{!}} National Snow and Ice Data Center|url=https://nsidc.org/cryosphere/snow/science/avalanches.html|access-date=23 March 2021|website=nsidc.org}}</ref> Avalanches can be triggered spontaneously, by factors such as increased precipitation or [[snowpack]] weakening, or by external means such as humans, other animals, and [[earthquake]]s. Primarily composed of flowing snow and air, large avalanches have the capability to capture and move ice, rocks, and trees.


Avalanches occur in two general forms, or combinations thereof:<ref>{{Cite book|last=Louchet|first=Francois|title=Snow Avalanches|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|year=2021|isbn=978-0-19-886693-0|pages=1–2|doi=10.1093/oso/9780198866930.001.0001}}</ref> '''slab avalanches''' made of tightly packed snow, triggered by a collapse of an underlying weak snow layer, and '''loose snow avalanches''' made of looser snow. After being set off, avalanches usually accelerate rapidly and grow in mass and volume as they capture more snow. If an avalanche moves fast enough, some of the snow may mix with the air, forming a [[powder snow avalanche]].
An '''avalanche''' is a sudden rapid flow of [[snow]] down a slope, occurring when either natural triggers or human activity causes a critical escalating transition from the slow equilibrium evolution of the snow pack. Typically occurring in mountainous terrain, an avalanche can mix air and water with the descending snow. Powerful avalanches have the capability to entrain ice, rocks, trees, and other material on the slope. Avalanches are primarily composed of flowing snow, and are distinct from [[Mudflow|mudslides]], [[Landslide|rock slides]], and [[serac]] collapses on an [[icefall]]. In contrast to other natural events which can cause disasters, avalanches are not rare or random events and are endemic to any mountain range that accumulates a standing snow pack. In mountainous terrain avalanches are among the most serious objective hazards to life and property, with their destructive capability resulting from their potential to carry an enormous mass of snow rapidly over large distances.


Though they appear to share similarities, avalanches are distinct from [[slush flow]]s, [[Mudflow|mudslides]], [[Landslide#Debris landslide|rock slides]], and [[serac]] collapses. They are also different from [[Ice-sheet dynamics|large scale movements of ice]]. Avalanches can happen in any mountain range that has an enduring snowpack. They are most frequent in winter or spring, but may occur at any time of the year. In mountainous areas, avalanches are among the most serious [[natural hazard]]s to life and property, so great efforts are made in [[avalanche control]]. There are many classification systems for the different forms of avalanches. Avalanches can be described by their size, destructive potential, initiation mechanism, composition, and [[Dynamics (mechanics)|dynamics]].
Avalanches are classified by their morphological characteristics, and are rated by either their destructive potential, or the mass of the downward flowing snow. Some of the morphological characteristics used to classify avalanches include the type of snow involved, the nature of the failure, the sliding surface, the propagation mechanism of the failure, the trigger of the avalanche, the slope angle, direction, and elevation. Avalanche size, mass, and destructive potential are rated on a [[logarithmic scale]], typically of 5 categories, with the precise definition of the categories depending on the observation system or forecast region.


== Formation ==
==Formation and occurrences==
[[File:Loose snow and slab avalanches near mt shuksan.jpg|thumb|Loose snow avalanches (far left) and slab avalanches (near center) near [[Mount Shuksan]] in the [[North Cascades]] mountains. Fracture propagation is relatively limited.]]
{{ref improve section|date=July 2009}}
[[File:Snowboarder triggered soft slab near mount baker.jpg|thumb|15 cm deep, soft slab avalanche triggered by a snowboarder near Heliotrope Ridge, [[Mount Baker]] in March 2010. Multiple crown fracture lines are visible in the top-middle of the image. Note the granular characteristic of the debris in the foreground that results from the slab breaking up during descent.]]


Most avalanches occur spontaneously during storms under increased load due to snowfall and/or [[erosion]]. Metamorphic changes in the snowpack, such as melting due to solar radiation, is the second-largest cause of natural avalanches. Other natural causes include rain, earthquakes, rockfall, and icefall. Artificial triggers of avalanches include skiers, snowmobiles, and controlled explosive work. Contrary to popular belief, avalanches are not triggered by loud sound; the pressure from sound is orders of magnitude too small to trigger an avalanche.<ref>{{cite conference|last1=Reuter|first1=B.|last2=Schweizer|first2=J.|year=2009|title=Avalanche triggering by sound: Myth and truth|url=http://gblanc.fr/IMG/pdf/reuter2009.pdf|conference=ISSW 09 – International Snow Science Workshop, Proceedings|pages=330–333|quote=Based on order of magnitude estimates of the pressure amplitude of various sources that cause elastic or pressure (sound) waves it can be ruled out that shouting or loud noise can trigger snow slab avalanches. The amplitudes are at least about two orders of magnitude smaller than known efficient triggers. Triggering by sound really is a myth.}}</ref>
Avalanches only occur when the stress on the snow exceeds the shear, ductile, and tensile strength either within the snow pack or at the contact of the base of the snow pack with the ground or rock surface. A number of the forces acting on a snow pack can be readily determined. For example, the weight of the snow is straightforward to calculate but it is very difficult to estimate the shear, ductile and tensile strengths within the snow pack or relative to the ground below. These strengths vary with the type of snow crystal and the bonding between them. The thermo-mechanical properties of the snow crystals in turn depend on the local conditions they have experienced such as temperature and humidity. One of the aims of avalanche research is to develop and validate computer models that can describe the time evolution of snow packs and predict the shear yield stress. A complicating factor is the large spatial variability that is typical.


Avalanche initiation can start at a point with only a small amount of snow moving initially; this is typical of wet snow avalanches or avalanches in dry unconsolidated snow. However, if the snow has sintered into a stiff slab overlying a weak layer, then fractures can propagate very rapidly, so that a large volume of snow, possibly thousands of cubic metres, can start moving almost simultaneously.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
===Classification and terminology===


A snowpack will fail when the load exceeds the strength. The load is straightforward; it is the weight of the snow. However, the strength of the snowpack is much more difficult to determine and is extremely heterogeneous. It varies in detail with properties of the snow grains, size, density, morphology, temperature, water content; and the properties of the bonds between the grains.<ref name="McClung 2006">McClung, David and Shaerer, Peter: ''The Avalanche Handbook, The Mountaineers'': 2006. {{ISBN|978-0-89886-809-8}}</ref> These properties may all metamorphose in time according to the local humidity, water vapour flux, temperature and heat flux. The top of the snowpack is also extensively influenced by incoming radiation and the local air flow. One of the aims of avalanche research is to develop and validate computer models that can describe the evolution of the seasonal snowpack over time.<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/3f58ea80-6488-31f0-867c-a94843e225e3/|archiveurl=https://archive.today/20130128103159/http://www.mendeley.com/research/physical-snowpack-model-swiss-avalanche-warning-part-i-numerical-model/|archivedate=2013-01-28|url-status=dead|title=A physical SNOWPACK model for the Swiss avalanche warning Part I: Numerical model|first1=Perry|last1=Bartelt|first2=Michael|last2=Lehning|date=24 May 2002|journal=Cold Regions Science and Technology|volume=35|issue=3|pages=123–145|via=www.mendeley.com|doi=10.1016/S0165-232X(02)00074-5|bibcode=2002CRST...35..123B }}</ref> A complicating factor is the complex interaction of terrain and weather, which causes significant spatial and temporal variability of the depths, crystal forms, and layering of the seasonal snowpack.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Avalanches: Their Dangers and How to Reduce Your Risks |url=https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/avalanches-their-dangers-and-how-to-reduce-your-risks |access-date=2024-04-15 |website=www.wunderground.com |language=en}}</ref>
All avalanches share common elements: a trigger which causes the avalanche, a start zone from which the avalanche originates, a slide path along which the avalanche flows, a run out where the avalanche comes to rest, and a debris deposit which is the accumulated mass of the avalanched snow once it has come to rest. As well avalanches have a failure layer that propagates the failure and the bed surface along which the snow initially slides, in most avalanches the failure layer and the bed surface are the same. Additionally slab avalanches have a crown fracture at the top of the start zone, flank fractures on the sides of the start zones, and a shallow staunch fracture at the bottom of the start zone. The crown and flank fractures are vertical walls in the snow delineating the snow that was entrained in the avalanche from the snow that remained on the slope.


=== Slab avalanches ===
The nature of the failure of the snow pack is used to morphologically classify the avalanche. Slab avalanches are generated when an additional load causes a brittle failure of a slab that is bridging a weak snow layer; this failure is propagated through fracture formation in the bridging slab. Loose snow, point release, and isothermal avalanches are generated when a stress causes a shear failure in a weak interface, either within the snow pack, or at the base. When the failure occurs at the base they are known as full depth avalanches. Spin drift avalanches occur when wind lifted snow is funneled into a steep drainage from above the drainage.
Slab avalanches are formed frequently in snow that has been deposited, or redeposited by wind. They have the characteristic appearance of a block (slab) of snow cut out from its surroundings by fractures. Elements of slab avalanches include a crown fracture at the top of the start zone, flank fractures on the sides of the start zones, and a fracture at the bottom called the stauchwall. The crown and flank fractures are vertical walls in the snow delineating the snow that was entrained in the avalanche from the snow that remained on the slope. Slabs can vary in thickness from a few centimetres to three metres. Slab avalanches account for around 90% of avalanche-related fatalities.{{fact|date=January 2024}}


=== Powder snow avalanches ===
[[Loose snow avalanche]]s occur in freshly fallen snow that has a lower density and are most common on steeper terrain. In fresh, loose snow the release is usually at a point and the avalanche then gradually widens down the slope as more snow is entrained, usually forming a teardrop appearance. This is in contrast to a [[slab avalanche]].
{{Main|Powder snow avalanche}}
The largest avalanches form turbulent suspension currents known as [[powder snow avalanche]]s or mixed avalanches,<ref>Simpson JE. 1997. Gravity currents in the environment and the laboratory. Cambridge University Press</ref> a kind of [[gravity current]]. These consist of a powder cloud, which overlies a dense avalanche. They can form from any type of snow or initiation mechanism, but usually occur with fresh dry powder. They can exceed speeds of {{convert|300|kph|abbr=on}}, and masses of 1,000,000 tons; their flows can travel long distances along flat valley bottoms and even uphill for short distances.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Avalanche |url=https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/avalanche |access-date=2024-04-10 |website=education.nationalgeographic.org |language=en}}</ref>


=== Wet snow avalanches ===
Slab avalanches account for around 90% of avalanche-related fatalities, and occur when there is a strong, cohesive layer of snow known as a slab. These are usually formed when falling snow is deposited by the wind on a lee slope, or when loose ground snow is transported elsewhere. When there is a failure in a [[weak layer]], a fracture very rapidly propagates so that a large area, that can be hundreds of meters in extent and several meters thick, starts moving almost instantaneously.
[[File:Lawinenkegel auf dem Simplonpass (2019).jpg|thumb|Avalanche on [[Simplon Pass]] (2019)]]
In contrast to powder snow avalanches, wet snow avalanches are a low velocity suspension of snow and water, with the flow confined to the track surface (McClung, 1999, p.&nbsp;108).<ref name="McClung 2006" /> The low speed of travel is due to the friction between the sliding surface of the track and the water saturated flow. Despite the low speed of travel (≈10–40&nbsp;km/h), wet snow avalanches are capable of generating powerful destructive forces, due to the large mass and density. The body of the flow of a wet snow avalanche can plough through soft snow, and can scour boulders, earth, trees, and other vegetation; leaving exposed and often scored ground in the avalanche track. Wet snow avalanches can be initiated from either loose snow releases, or slab releases, and only occur in snowpacks that are water saturated and isothermally equilibrated to the melting point of water. The isothermal characteristic of wet snow avalanches has led to the secondary term of isothermal slides found in the literature (for example in Daffern, 1999, p.&nbsp;93).<ref name="Daffern 1999">Daffern, Tony: Avalanche Safety for Skiers, Climbers and Snowboarders, Rocky Mountain Books: 1999. {{ISBN|0-921102-72-0}}</ref> At temperate latitudes wet snow avalanches are frequently associated with climatic avalanche cycles at the end of the winter season, when there is significant daytime warming.{{fact|date=January 2024}}


=== Ice avalanche ===
A third starting type is a wet snow avalanche or [[isothermal avalanche]], which occurs when the snow pack becomes saturated by water. These tend to also start and spread out from a point. When the percentage of water is very high they are known as [[slush flows]] and they can move on very shallow slopes.
An ice avalanche occurs when a large piece of ice, such as from a serac or calving glacier, falls onto ice (such as the Khumbu Icefall), triggering a movement of broken ice chunks. The resulting movement is more analogous to a rockfall or a landslide than a snow avalanche.<ref name="McClung 2006" /> They are typically very difficult to predict and almost impossible to mitigate.{{fact|date=January 2024}}


=== Avalanche pathway ===
Among the largest and most powerful of avalanches, powder snow avalanches can exceed speeds of 300&nbsp;km/h, and masses of 10,000,000 tonnes; their flows can travel long distances along flat valley bottoms and even up hill for short distances. A powder snow avalanche is a [[powder cloud]] that forms when an avalanche accelerates over an abrupt change in slope, such as a cliff band, causing the snow to mix with air. This turbulent suspension of snow particles then flows as a [[gravity current]].
As an avalanche moves down a slope it follows a certain pathway that is dependent on the slope's degree of steepness and the volume of snow/ice involved in the [[Mass wasting|mass movement]]. The origin of an avalanche is called the Starting Point and typically occurs on a 30–45 degree slope. The body of the pathway is called the Track of the avalanche and usually occurs on a 20–30 degree slope. When the avalanche loses its momentum and eventually stops it reaches the Runout Zone. This usually occurs when the slope has reached a steepness that is less than 20 degrees.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Natural Disasters|last=Abbott|first=Patrick|publisher=McGraw-Hill Education|year=2016|isbn=978-0-07-802298-2|location=New York}}</ref> These degrees are not consistently true due to the fact that each avalanche is unique depending on the stability of the [[snowpack]] that it was derived from as well as the environmental or human influences that triggered the mass movement.{{fact|date=January 2024}}


== Injuries and deaths ==
===Terrain===
People caught in avalanches can die from [[suffocation]], trauma, or [[hypothermia]]. From "1950–1951 to 2020–2021"<ref name="Colorado Avalanche Information Center">{{cite web| title = Statistics and Reporting
[[Image:North Ridge of Mount Rohr.jpg|thumb|250px|In steep avalanche-prone terrain, traveling on [[ridge]]s is generally safer than traversing the slopes.]]
| url = http://avalanche.state.co.us/accidents/statistics-and-reporting/| publisher = Colorado Avalanche Information Center
Terrain affects avalanche occurrence and development through three factors: First, terrain affects the evolution of the snow pack by determining the meteorological exposure of the snow pack. Second, terrain affects the stability of the snow pack, through the geometry and ground composition of the slope. Third, the down slope features of the terrain affects the path and consequences of a flowing avalanche.
| access-date = 2016-09-03|archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20220705015609/https://avalanche.state.co.us/accidents/statistics-and-reporting/
|archive-date =5 July 2022}}</ref> there were 1,169 people who died in avalanches in the United States.<ref name="Colorado Avalanche Information Center" /> For the 11-year period ending April 2006, 445 people died in avalanches throughout North America.<ref>{{cite web | title = Previous Season Avalanche Accidents | url = http://www.avalanche.org/accidnt1.htm | publisher = Westwide Avalanche Network | access-date = 2006-12-16|archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20060928065031/http://www.avalanche.org/accidnt1.htm |archive-date = 2006-09-28}}</ref> On average, 28 people die in avalanches every winter in the United States.<ref name="ready.gov">{{cite web |url = http://www.ready.gov/avalanche |title=Avalanche |website=ready.gov | publisher = Department of Homeland Security | access-date=25 January 2019}}</ref>
In 2001 it was reported that globally an average of 150 people die each year from avalanches.<ref>{{cite web | title = Avalanche Fatalities in IKAR Countries 1976–2001| url = http://www.avalanche.org/~uac/graf_world_ava.html| publisher = Utah Avalanche Center
|access-date = 2006-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061104004109/http://www.avalanche.org/~uac/graf_world_ava.html |archive-date = 2006-11-04}}</ref> From 2014-2024, the majority of those killed in avalanches in the United States were skiing (91) followed by snowmobiling (71), snowshoeing/climbing/hiking (38), and snowboarding (20).<ref>{{Cite web |last=Team |first=Legal |date=2024-10-25 |title=Colorado Avalanche Deaths {{!}} 10 Years of Data |url=https://www.trialproven.com/colorado/colorado-avalanche-deaths/ |access-date=2024-12-06 |website=Dulin McQuinn Young |language=en-US}}</ref> Three of [[List of avalanches by death toll|the deadliest recorded avalanches]] have killed over a thousand people each.


== Terrain, snowpack, weather ==
For a slope to generate an avalanche it must be simultaneously capable of retaining snow, and allowing snow to accelerate once set in motion. The angle of the slope that can hold snow depends on the ductile and shear strength of the snow, which is determined by the temperature and moisture content of the snow. Drier and colder snow, with lower ductile and shear strength, will only bond to lower angle slopes; while wet and warm snow, with higher ductile and shear strength, can bound to very steep surfaces. In particular, in coastal mountains, such as the [[Cordillera del Paine]] region of [[Patagonia]], deep snow packs collect on vertical, and overhanging, rock faces. The angle of slope that can allow moving snow to accelerate depends on the shear strength of the snow. Snow that has been water saturated to the point of slush can accelerate on shallow angled terrain; while a cohesive snow pack will not accelerate on very steep slopes, such as the typical snow pack in the [[Chugach Mountains]] of [[Alaska]].
[[File:North Ridge of Mount Rohr.jpg|thumb|In steep avalanche-prone terrain, traveling on [[ridge]]s is generally safer than traversing the slopes.]]
[[Image:Mount Windsor Cornice2.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A [[cornice (climbing)|cornice]] of snow about to fall. Cracks in the snow are visible in area (1). Area (3) fell soon after this picture was taken, leaving area (2) as the new edge.]]
[[File:Mount Windsor Cornice2.jpg|thumb|A [[cornice (climbing)|cornice]] of snow about to fall. Cracks in the snow are visible in area (1). Area (3) fell soon after this picture was taken, leaving area (2) as the new edge.]]
The snow pack on slopes with sunny exposures are strongly influenced by [[Sunlight|sunshine]]. Daily cycles of mild thawing and refreezing can stabilize the snow pack by promoting settlement, strong freeze thaw cycles will result in the formation of surface crusts during the night, and the formation of unstable isothermal snow during the day. Slopes in the lee of a ridge or other wind obstacle accumulate more snow and are more likely to include pockets of abnormally deep snow, wind slabs, and [[cornice (climbing)|cornices]], all of which, when disturbed, may trigger an avalanche. Conversely a windward slope will be bare of snow.
Doug Fesler and Jill Fredston developed a conceptual model of the three primary elements of avalanches: terrain, weather, and snowpack. Terrain describes the places where avalanches occur, weather describes the meteorological conditions that create the snowpack, and snowpack describes the structural characteristics of snow that make avalanche formation possible.<ref name="McClung 2006" /><ref>Fesler, Doug and Fredston, Jill: ''Snow Sense'', Alaska Mountain Safety Center, Inc. 2011. {{ISBN|978-0-615-49935-2}}</ref>
The start zone of an avalanche must be steep enough to allow snow to accelerate once set in motion, additionally [[Convex function|convex]] slopes are less stable than [[concave function|concave]] slopes, because of the disparity between the [[tensile strength]] of snow layers and their [[compressive strength]]. The composition and structure of the ground surface beneath the snow pack influences the stability of the snow pack, either being a source of strength or weakness. Thickly forested areas are unlikely to be avalanche paths, however boulders and sparsely distributed vegetation can create weak areas deep within the snow pack, through the formation of strong temperature gradients. Full-depth avalanches (avalanches that sweep a slope virtually clean of snow cover) are more common on slopes with smooth ground cover, such as grass or rock slabs.


=== Terrain ===
Avalanches follow drainages down slope, frequently sharing drainage features with summertime watersheds. At and below tree line these drainages are well defined by vegetation boundaries where the avalanches have prevented the growth of large vegetation. Engineered drainages, such as the [[avalanche dam]] on [[Mount Stephen]] in [[Kicking Horse Pass]], have been constructed to protect people and property, by redirecting the flow of avalanches. Deep debris deposits from avalanches will collect in catchments at the terminus of a run out, such as gullies, and river beds.
Avalanche formation requires a slope shallow enough for snow to accumulate but steep enough for the snow to accelerate once set in motion by the combination of mechanical failure (of the snowpack) and gravity. The angle of the slope that can hold snow, called the [[angle of repose]], depends on a variety of factors, such as crystal form and moisture content. Some forms of drier and colder snow will only stick to shallower slopes, while wet and warm snow can bond to very steep surfaces. In coastal mountains, such as the [[Cordillera del Paine]] region of [[Patagonia]], deep snowpacks collect on vertical and even overhanging rock faces. The slope angle that can allow moving snow to accelerate depends on a variety of factors such as the snow's shear strength (which is itself dependent upon crystal form) and the configuration of layers and inter-layer interfaces.{{fact|date=January 2024}}


The snowpack on slopes with sunny exposures is strongly influenced by [[Sunlight|sunshine]]. Diurnal cycles of thawing and refreezing can stabilize the snowpack by promoting settlement. Strong freeze-thaw cycles result in the formation of surface crusts during the night and of unstable surface snow during the day. Slopes in the lee of a ridge or of another wind obstacle accumulate more snow and are more likely to include pockets of deep snow, [[wind slabs]], and [[cornice (climbing)|cornices]], all of which, when disturbed, may result in avalanche formation. Conversely, the snowpack on a windward slope is often much shallower than on a lee slope.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Avalanche Safety Guidelines |url=https://www.ehss.vt.edu/uploaded_docs/201006231613220.Avalanche_Safety_Guideline.pdf |access-date=April 10, 2024 |website=www.ehss.vt.edu}}</ref>
Slopes flatter than 25 degrees or steeper than 60 degrees typically have a lower incidence of avalanche involvement, likewise slopes with windward and sunny exposure have a lower incidence of avalanche involvement . Human triggered avalanches have the greatest incidence when the snow's [[angle of repose]] is between 35 and 45 degrees; the critical angle, the angle at which the human incidence of avalanches is greatest, is 38 degrees. But when the incidence of human triggered avalanches are normalized by the rates of recreational use hazard increases uniformly with slope angle, and no significant difference in hazard for a given exposure direction can be found.<ref name="Pascal Hageli et al">[http://www.avisualanche.ca/publications.html Pascal Hageli et al.]</ref> The rule of thumb is: ''A slope that is flat enough to hold snow but steep enough to ski has the potential to generate an avalanche, regardless of the angle.''


[[File:Avalanche path 7271.JPG|thumb|left|Avalanche path with {{convert|800|m|ft}} vertical fall in the [[Glacier Peak Wilderness]], [[Washington (state)|Washington state]]. Avalanche paths in alpine terrain may be poorly defined because of limited vegetation. Below tree line, avalanche paths are often delineated by vegetative trim lines created by past avalanches. The start zone is visible near the top of the image, the track is in the middle of the image and clearly denoted by vegetative trimlines, and the runout zone is shown at the bottom of the image. One possible timeline is as follows: an avalanche forms in the start zone near the ridge, and then descends the track, until coming to rest in the runout zone.]]
===Snow structure and characteristics===
Avalanches and avalanche paths share common elements: a start zone where the avalanche originates, a track along which the avalanche flows, and a runout zone where the avalanche comes to rest. The debris deposit is the accumulated mass of the avalanched snow once it has come to rest in the run-out zone. For the image at left, many small avalanches form in this avalanche path every year, but most of these avalanches do not run the full vertical or horizontal length of the path. The frequency with which avalanches form in a given area is known as the [[return period]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Return period calculated for study snow avalanche paths using the existing method |url=https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Return-period-calculated-for-study-snow-avalanche-paths-using-the-existing-method_fig4_327258239 |access-date=April 10, 2024 |website=www.researchgate.net}}</ref>
[[Image:D Hoarfrost 3.jpg|thumb|After surface [[hoarfrost]] becomes buried by later snowfall, the buried hoar layer can be a weak layer upon which upper layers can slide.]]


The start zone of an avalanche must be steep enough to allow snow to accelerate once set in motion, additionally [[Convex function|convex]] slopes are less stable than [[concave function|concave]] slopes because of the disparity between the [[tensile strength]] of snow layers and their [[compressive strength]]. The composition and structure of the ground surface beneath the snowpack influences the stability of the snowpack, either being a source of strength or weakness. Avalanches are unlikely to form in very thick forests, but boulders and sparsely distributed vegetation can create weak areas deep within the snowpack through the formation of strong temperature gradients. Full-depth avalanches (avalanches that sweep a slope virtually clean of snow cover) are more common on slopes with smooth ground, such as grass or rock slabs.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Glossary |url=https://avalanche.ca/glossary |access-date=2024-04-10 |website=avalanche.ca |language=en}}</ref>
The snow pack is composed of deposition layers of snow that are accumulated over time. The deposition layers are stratified parallel to the ground surface on which the snow falls. Each deposition layer indicates a distinct meteorological condition during which the snow was accumulated. Once deposited a snow layer will continue to evolve and develop under the influence of the meteorological conditions that prevail after deposition.


Generally speaking, avalanches follow drainages down-slope, frequently sharing drainage features with summertime watersheds. At and below [[tree line]], avalanche paths through drainages are well defined by vegetation boundaries called [[trim line]]s, which occur where avalanches have removed trees and prevented regrowth of large vegetation. Engineered drainages, such as the [[avalanche dam on Mount Stephen in Kicking Horse Pass]], have been constructed to protect people and property by redirecting the flow of avalanches. Deep debris deposits from avalanches will collect in catchments at the terminus of a run out, such as gullies and river beds.
For an avalanche to occur, it is necessary that a snow pack have a weak layer (or instability) below a slab of cohesive snow. In practice the mechanical and structural determinants of snow pack stability are not directly observable outside of laboratories, thus the more easily observed properties of the snow layers (e.g. penetration resistance, grain size, grain type, temperature) are used as proxy measurements of the mechanical properties of the snow (e.g. tensile strength, friction coefficients, shear strength, and ductile strength). This results in two principal sources of uncertainty in determining snow pack stability based on snow structure: First, both the factors influencing snow stability and the specific characteristics of the snow pack vary widely within small areas and time scales, resulting in an inability to extrapolate point observations of snow layers. Second, the understanding of the relationship between the readily observable snow pack characteristics and the snow pack's critical mechanical properties has not been completely developed.


Slopes flatter than 25&nbsp;degrees or steeper than 60&nbsp;degrees typically have a lower incidence of avalanches. Human-triggered avalanches have the greatest incidence when the snow's [[angle of repose]] is between 35 and 45&nbsp;degrees; the critical angle,<ref name=":1" /> the angle at which human-triggered avalanches are most frequent, is 38&nbsp;degrees. When the incidence of human triggered avalanches is normalized by the rates of recreational use, however, hazard increases uniformly with slope angle, and no significant difference in hazard for a given exposure direction can be found.<ref name="Pascal Hageli et al">{{Cite web |last=Hageli |first=Pascal |display-authors=etal |title=AVISUALANCHE – SELECTED PUBLICATIONS |url=http://www.avisualanche.ca/publications.html |website=www.avisualanche.ca}}</ref> The rule of thumb is: ''A slope that is flat enough to hold snow but steep enough to ski has the potential to generate an avalanche, regardless of the angle.''{{fact|date=January 2024}}
While the deterministic relationship between snow pack characteristics and snow pack stability is still a matter of ongoing scientific study, there is a growing empirical understanding of the snow composition and deposition characteristics that influence the likelihood of an avalanche. Observation and experience has shown that newly fallen snow requires time to bond with the snow layers beneath it, especially if the new snow falls during very cold and dry conditions. Shallower snow, that can lie above or around boulders, plants, and other discontinuities in the slope, will weaken from the presence of a stronger temperature gradient. Larger and more angular snow crystals are an indicator of weaker bonds within the snow pack, because the [[sintering]] process that forms bonds within the snow pack will also cause the snow crystals to become smaller and rounder. Consolidated snow is less likely to slough than either loose powdery layers or wet isothermal snow; however, consolidated snow is a necessary condition for the occurrence of slab avalanches, and will mask persistent instabilities within a snow pack. The empirical understanding of the factors influencing snow stability only places broad predictive bounds on the stability of the snow, consequently a conservative use of avalanche terrain, well within the recommended guidelines of the local avalanche forecasts and bulletins, is always recommended.


=== Snowpack structure and characteristics ===
===Weather===
[[File:D Hoarfrost 3.jpg|thumb|After surface [[hoarfrost]] becomes buried by later snowfall, the buried hoar layer can be a weak layer upon which upper layers can slide.]]
[[Image:Avalanche testing snow pit.JPG|thumb|left|250px|After digging a snow pit, it is possible to evaluate the snowpack for unstable layers. In this picture, snow from a weak layer has been easily scraped away by hand, leaving a horizontal line in the wall of the pit.]]
The snowpack is composed of ground-parallel layers that accumulate over the winter. Each layer contains ice grains that are representative of the distinct meteorological conditions during which the snow formed and was deposited. Once deposited, a snow layer continues to evolve under the influence of the meteorological conditions that prevail after deposition.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
Avalanches can only occur in a standing snow pack. Typically winter seasons and high altitudes have weather that is sufficiently unsettled and cold enough for precipitated snow to accumulate into a snow pack. The evolution of the snow pack is critically sensitive to small variations within the narrow range of meteorological conditions that allow for the accumulation of snow into a snow pack. Among the critical factors controlling snow pack evolution are: heating by the sun, [[radiational cooling]], vertical [[temperature gradient]]s in standing snow, snowfall amounts, and snow types. Generally, mild winter weather will promote the settlement and stabilization of the snow pack; and conversely very cold, windy, or hot weather will weaken the snow pack.


For an avalanche to occur, it is necessary that a snowpack have a weak layer (or instability) below a slab of cohesive snow. In practice the formal mechanical and structural factors related to snowpack instability are not directly observable outside of laboratories, thus the more easily observed properties of the snow layers (e.g. penetration resistance, grain size, grain type, temperature) are used as index measurements of the mechanical properties of the snow (e.g. [[tensile strength]], [[friction]] coefficients, [[shear strength]], and [[Ductility|ductile strength]]). This results in two principal sources of uncertainty in determining snowpack stability based on snow structure: First, both the factors influencing snow stability and the specific characteristics of the snowpack vary widely within small areas and time scales, resulting in significant difficulty extrapolating point observations of snow layers across different scales of space and time. Second, the relationship between readily observable snowpack characteristics and the snowpack's critical mechanical properties has not been completely developed.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
At temperatures close to the freezing point of water, or during times of moderate solar radiation, a gentle freeze-thaw cycle will take place. The melting and refreezing of water in the snow strengthens the snow pack during the freezing phase and weakens it during the thawing phase. A rapid rise in temperature, to a point significantly above the freezing point of water, may cause a slope to avalanche, especially in the spring.


While the deterministic relationship between snowpack characteristics and snowpack stability is still a matter of ongoing scientific study, there is a growing empirical understanding of the snow composition and deposition characteristics that influence the likelihood of an avalanche. Observation and experience has shown that newly fallen snow requires time to bond with the snow layers beneath it, especially if the new snow falls during very cold and dry conditions. If ambient air temperatures are cold enough, shallow snow above or around boulders, plants, and other discontinuities in the slope, weakens from rapid crystal growth that occurs in the presence of a critical temperature gradient. Large, angular snow crystals are indicators of weak snow, because such crystals have fewer bonds per unit volume than small, rounded crystals that pack tightly together. Consolidated snow is less likely to slough than loose powdery layers or wet isothermal snow; however, consolidated snow is a necessary condition for the occurrence of [[slab avalanche]]s, and persistent instabilities within the snowpack can hide below well-consolidated surface layers. Uncertainty associated with the empirical understanding of the factors influencing snow stability leads most professional avalanche workers to recommend conservative use of avalanche terrain relative to current snowpack instability.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
Persistent cold temperatures can either prevent the snow from stabilizing or destabilize a snow pack. Cold air temperatures on the snow surface produce a temperature gradient in the snow, because the ground temperature at the base of the snow pack is close to freezing; unless the snow pack is standing on glaciated terrain, in which case the temperature at the base of the snow pack can be significantly below freezing. When a temperature gradient greater than 10<sup>o</sup>C change per vertical meter of snow is sustained for more than a day [[depth hoar]] will form in the snow pack, through the thermal transport of moisture away from the [[depth hoar]] along the temperature gradient, from bottom to top. This layer of [[depth hoar]] becomes a persistent weakness in the snow pack, characterized by faceted grains forming either above or below crusts and slabs. When a slab lying on top of this persistent weakness is loaded by a force above the tensile and ductile strength of the slab and the shear strength of the persistent weak layer, the persistent weak layer will fail and generate an avalanche.


=== Weather ===
Any wind stronger than a light breeze can contribute to a rapid accumulation of snow on sheltered slopes downwind. Wind pressure at a favorable angle can stabilize other slopes. A "wind slab" is a particularly fragile and brittle structure which is heavily loaded and poorly bonded to its underlayment. Even on a clear day, wind can quickly shift the snow load on a slope. This can occur in two ways: by top-loading and by cross-loading. Top-loading occurs when wind deposits snow perpendicular to the [[Fall line (skiing)|fall-line]] on a slope; cross-loading occurs when wind deposits snow parallel to the fall-line. When a wind blows over the top of a mountain, the leeward, or downwind, side of the mountain experiences top-loading, from the top to the bottom of that lee slope. When the wind blows across a ridge that leads up the mountain, the leeward side of the ridge is subject to cross-loading. Cross-loaded wind-slabs are usually difficult to identify visually.
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2021}}
[[File:Avalanche testing snow pit.JPG|thumb|left|After digging a snow pit, it is possible to evaluate the snowpack for unstable layers. In this picture, snow from a weak layer has been easily scraped away by hand, leaving a horizontal line in the wall of the pit.]]
Avalanches only occur in a standing snowpack. Typically winter seasons at high latitudes, high altitudes, or both have weather that is sufficiently unsettled and cold enough for precipitated snow to accumulate into a seasonal snowpack. [[Continentality]], through its potentiating influence on the meteorological extremes experienced by snowpacks, is an important factor in the evolution of instabilities, and consequential occurrence of avalanches faster stabilization of the snowpack after storm cycles.<ref>Whiteman, Charles David: ''Mountain Meteorology: Fundamentals and Applications'', Oxford University Press: 2001. {{ISBN|0-19-513271-8}}</ref> The evolution of the snowpack is critically sensitive to small variations within the narrow range of meteorological conditions that allow for the accumulation of snow into a snowpack. Among the critical factors controlling snowpack evolution are: heating by the sun, [[radiational cooling]], vertical [[temperature gradient]]s in standing snow, snowfall amounts, and snow types. Generally, mild winter weather will promote the settlement and stabilization of the snowpack; conversely, very cold, windy, or hot weather will weaken the snowpack.<ref>{{Cite web |last=US EPA |first=OAR |date=2016-07-01 |title=Climate Change Indicators: Snowpack |url=https://www.epa.gov/climate-indicators/climate-change-indicators-snowpack |access-date=2024-04-15 |website=www.epa.gov |language=en}}</ref>


At temperatures close to the freezing point of water, or during times of moderate solar radiation, a gentle freeze-thaw cycle will take place. The melting and refreezing of water in the snow strengthens the snowpack during the freezing phase and weakens it during the thawing phase. A rapid rise in temperature, to a point significantly above the freezing point of water, may cause avalanche formation at any time of year.<ref>{{Cite web |last=O'Neill |first=Donny |date=2021-04-12 |title=How Climate Change Impacts Avalanche Conditions |url=https://protectourwinters.org/how-does-climate-change-impact-avalanches/ |access-date=2024-04-10 |website=Protect Our Winters |language=en-US}}</ref>
Snowstorms and rainstorms are important contributors to avalanche danger. Heavy snowfall will cause instability in the existing snow pack, both because of the additional weight and because the new snow has insufficient time to bond to underlying snow layers. Rain has a similar effect. In the short-term, rain causes instability because, like a heavy snowfall, it imposes an additional load on the snow pack; and, once rainwater seeps down through the snow, it acts as a lubricant, reducing the natural friction between snow layers that holds the snow pack together. Most avalanches happen during or soon after a storm.


Persistent cold temperatures can either prevent new snow from stabilizing or destabilize the existing snowpack. Cold air temperatures on the snow surface produce a temperature gradient in the snow, because the ground temperature at the base of the snowpack is usually around 0&nbsp;°C, and the ambient air temperature can be much colder. When a temperature gradient greater than 10&nbsp;°C change per vertical meter of snow is sustained for more than a day, angular crystals called [[depth hoar]] or facets begin forming in the snowpack because of rapid moisture transport along the temperature gradient. These angular crystals, which bond poorly to one another and the surrounding snow, often become a persistent weakness in the snowpack. When a slab lying on top of a persistent weakness is loaded by a force greater than the strength of the slab and persistent weak layer, the persistent weak layer can fail and generate an avalanche.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
Daytime exposure to sunlight will rapidly destabilize the upper layers of a snow pack. Sunlight reduces the [[sintering]], or [[necking (engineering)|necking]], between snow grains. During clear nights, the snow pack can strengthen, or tighten, through the process of long-wave radiative cooling. When the night air is significantly cooler than the snow pack, the heat stored in the snow is re-radiated into the atmosphere.


Any wind stronger than a light breeze can contribute to a rapid accumulation of snow on sheltered slopes downwind. Wind slabs form quickly and, if present, weaker snow below the slab may not have time to adjust to the new load. Even on a clear day, wind can quickly load a slope with snow by blowing snow from one place to another. Top-loading occurs when wind deposits snow from the top of a slope; cross-loading occurs when wind deposits snow parallel to the slope. When a wind blows over the top of a mountain, the leeward, or downwind, side of the mountain experiences top-loading, from the top to the bottom of that lee slope. When the wind blows across a ridge that leads up the mountain, the leeward side of the ridge is subject to cross-loading. Cross-loaded wind-slabs are usually difficult to identify visually.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
===Triggers===
Avalanches are always caused by an external stress on the snow pack; they are not random or spontaneous events. Natural triggers of avalanches include additional precipitation, radiative and convective heating, rock fall, ice fall, and other sudden impacts; however, even a snow pack held at a constant temperature, pressure, and humidity will evolve over time and develop stresses, often from the downslope creep of the snow pack. Human triggers of avalanches include skiers, snowmobiles, and controlled explosive work. The triggering stress load can be either localized to the failure point, or remote. Localized triggers of avalanches are typified by point releases from solar heated rocks. Remotely triggered avalanches occur when a tensile stress wave is transmitted through the slab to the start zone, once the stress wave reaches the start zone a fracture initiates and propagates the failure. Of exceptional note is that avalanches can not only entrain additional snow within the failing slab, but can also, given the sufficient accumulation of overburden due to a smaller avalanche, step down and trigger deeper slab instabilities that would be more resilient against smaller stresses. The triggering of avalanches is an example of [[critical phenomenon]].


Snowstorms and rainstorms are important contributors to avalanche danger. Heavy snowfall will cause instability in the existing snowpack, both because of the additional weight and because the new snow has insufficient time to bond to underlying snow layers. Rain has a similar effect. In the short term, rain causes instability because, like a heavy snowfall, it imposes an additional load on the snowpack and once rainwater seeps down through the snow, acts as a lubricant, reducing the natural friction between snow layers that holds the snowpack together. Most avalanches happen during or soon after a storm.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
==Dynamics==
When an avalanche occurs, as the snow slides down the slope any slab present begins to fragment into increasingly smaller tumbling fragments. If the fragments become small enough the avalanche takes on the characteristics of a [[fluid]]. When sufficiently fine particles are present they can become airborne and, given a sufficient quantity of airborne snow, this portion of the avalanche can become separated from the bulk of the avalanche and travel a greater distance as a powder snow avalanche.<ref>[http://www.leeds.ac.uk/satsie/docs/final_report.pdf SATSIE Final Report (large PDF file - 33.1 Mb)], page 94, October 1, 2005 to May 31, 2006</ref> Scientific studies using [[radar]], following the 1999 [[Galtür Avalanche|Galtür avalanche disaster]], confirmed suspicions that a [[Saltation (geology)|saltation layer]] forms between the surface and the airborne components of an avalanche, which can also separate from the bulk of the avalanche.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/1999/avalanche_script.shtml Horizon: Anatomy of an Avalanche], ''[[BBC]]', 1999-11-25</ref>


Daytime exposure to sunlight will rapidly destabilize the upper layers of the snowpack if the sunlight is strong enough to melt the snow, thereby reducing its hardness. During clear nights, the snowpack can re-freeze when ambient air temperatures fall below freezing, through the process of long-wave radiative cooling, or both. Radiative heat loss occurs when the night air is significantly cooler than the snowpack, and the heat stored in the snow is re-radiated into the atmosphere.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Physical Properties of Snow |url=https://www.inscc.utah.edu/~campbell/snowdynamics/reading/Pomeroy.pdf |access-date=April 9, 2024 |website=University of Utah}}</ref>
Driving a (non-airborne) avalanche is the component of the avalanche's weight parallel to the slope; as the avalanche progresses any unstable snow in its path will tend to become incorporated, so increasing the overall weight. This force will increase as the steepness of the slope increases, and diminish as the slope flattens. Resisting this are a number of components that are thought to interact with each other: the friction between the avalanche and the surface beneath; friction between the air and snow within the fluid; fluid-dynamic drag at the leading edge of the avalanche; shear resistance between the avalanche and the air through which it is passing, and shear resistance between the fragments within the avalanche itself. An avalanche will continue to accelerate until the resistance exceeds the forward force.<ref>[http://www.avalanche.org/~moonstone/zoning/avalanche%20dynamics.htm Avalanche Dynamics], Art Mears, 2002-07-11</ref>


===Modelling===
== Dynamics ==
When a slab avalanche forms, the slab disintegrates into increasingly smaller fragments as the snow travels downhill. If the fragments become small enough the outer layer of the avalanche, called a saltation layer, takes on the characteristics of a [[fluid]]. When sufficiently fine particles are present they can become airborne and, given a sufficient quantity of airborne snow, this portion of the avalanche can become separated from the bulk of the avalanche and travel a greater distance as a powder snow avalanche.<ref name="final_report">{{cite web |url=http://www.leeds.ac.uk/satsie/docs/final_report.pdf |title=SATSIE Final Report (large PDF file – 33.1 Mb) |page=94 |date=31 May 2006 |url-status=dead |access-date=5 April 2008 |archive-date=12 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200612122525/http://www.leeds.ac.uk/satsie/docs/final_report.pdf}}</ref> Scientific studies using [[radar]], following the 1999 [[Galtür Avalanche|Galtür avalanche disaster]], confirmed the hypothesis that a [[Saltation (geology)|saltation layer]] forms between the surface and the airborne components of an avalanche, which can also separate from the bulk of the avalanche.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/1999/avalanche_script.shtml |title=Horizon: Anatomy of an Avalanche |publisher=[[BBC]] |date=25 November 1999}}</ref>
Attempts to model avalanche behaviour date from the early 20th century, notably the work of Professor Lagotala in preparation for the [[1924 Winter Olympics]] in [[Chamonix]].<ref name=Ancey>[http://lhe.epfl.ch/pdf/snow-avalanche.pdf Snow Avalanches], Christophe Ancey</ref> His method was developed by A. Voellmy and popularised following the publication in 1955 of his ''Ueber die Zerstoerungskraft von Lawinen'' (On the Destructive Force of Avalanches).<ref>VOELLMY, A., 1955. ''Ober die Zerstorunskraft von Lawinen''. Schweizerische Bauzetung (English: ''On the Destructive Force of Avalanches''. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service).</ref>


Driving an avalanche is the component of the avalanche's weight parallel to the slope; as the avalanche progresses any unstable snow in its path will tend to become incorporated, so increasing the overall weight. This force will increase as the steepness of the slope increases, and diminish as the slope flattens. Resisting this are a number of components that are thought to interact with each other: the friction between the avalanche and the surface beneath; friction between the air and snow within the fluid; fluid-dynamic drag at the leading edge of the avalanche; shear resistance between the avalanche and the air through which it is passing, and shear resistance between the fragments within the avalanche itself. An avalanche will continue to accelerate until the resistance exceeds the forward force.<ref>[http://www.avalanche.org/~moonstone/zoning/avalanche%20dynamics.htm Avalanche Dynamics] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090224071418/http://www.avalanche.org/~moonstone/zoning/avalanche%20dynamics.htm |date=24 February 2009}}, Art Mears, 11 July 2002.</ref>
Voellmy used a simple empirical formula, treating an avalanche as a sliding block of snow moving with a drag force that was proportional to the square of the speed of its flow:<ref>[http://www.grenoble.cemagref.fr/etna/resultats/program_region/BERTHETRAMBAUDPGRN.pdf Quantification de la sollicitation structures métaliques avalancheuse par analyse en retour du comportement de structures métallliques], page 14, ''Pôle Grenoblois d’études et de recherche
pour la Prévention des risques naturels'', October 2003, in French</ref>


=== Modeling ===
::<math>Pref = \frac {1} {2} \, { \rho} \, { v^2} \,\!</math>
Attempts to model avalanche behaviour date from the early 20th century, notably the work of Professor Lagotala in preparation for the [[1924 Winter Olympics]] in [[Chamonix]].<ref name=Ancey>[http://lhe.epfl.ch/pdf/snow-avalanche.pdf Snow Avalanches], Christophe Ancey</ref> His method was developed by A. Voellmy and popularised following the publication in 1955 of his ''Ueber die Zerstoerungskraft von Lawinen'' (On the Destructive Force of Avalanches).<ref>Voellmy, A., 1955. ''Ober die Zerstorunskraft von Lawinen''. Schweizerische Bauzetung (English: ''On the Destructive Force of Avalanches''. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service).</ref>


Voellmy used a simple empirical formula, treating an avalanche as a sliding block of snow moving with a drag force that was proportional to the square of the speed of its flow:<ref>[http://www.risknat.org/pages/programme_dep/docs/cemagref_etna/2002_Berthet-Rambaud.pdf Quantification de la sollicitation avalancheuse par analyse en retour du comportement de structures métalliques], page 14, ''Pôle Grenoblois d'études et de recherche pour la Prévention des risques naturels'', October 2003, in French</ref>
He and others subsequently derived other formulae that take other factors into account, with the Voellmy-Salm-Gubler and the Perla-Cheng-McClung models becoming most widely used as simple tools to model flowing (as opposed to powder snow) avalanches.<ref name=Ancey/>


::<math> \textrm{Pref} = \frac {1} {2} \, { \rho} \, { v^2} \,\!</math>
Since the 1990s many more sophisticated models have been developed. In Europe much of the recent work was carried out as part of the SATSIE (Avalanche Studies and Model Validation in Europe) research project supported by the [[European Commission]]<ref>[http://www.leeds.ac.uk/satsie/ SATSIE - Avalanche Studies and Model Validation in Europe]</ref> which produced the leading-edge MN2L model, now in use with the ''Service Réstitution Terrains en Montagne'' (Mountain Rescue Service) in
France, and D2FRAM (Dynamical Two-Flow-Regime Avalanche Model), which was still undergoing validation as of 2007.<ref>[http://www.leeds.ac.uk/satsie/docs/final_report.pdf SATSIE Final Report (large PDF file - 33.1 Mb)], October 1, 2005 to May 31, 2006</ref>


He and others subsequently derived other formulae that take other factors into account, with the Voellmy-Salm-Gubler and the Perla-Cheng-McClung models becoming most widely used as simple tools to model flowing (as opposed to powder snow) avalanches.<ref name=Ancey />
==Avalanche avoidance==
[[Image:Avalanche warning in Tuckerman.JPG|thumb|right|250px|[[United States Forest Service]] avalanche danger advisories.]]
[[Image:Verbauung Tanngrindel.JPG|right|thumb|250px|[[Snow fence]]s in [[Switzerland]]]]
[[Image:Avalanche Blasting.jpg|250px|thumb|Avalanche blasting in French [[ski resort]] [[Tignes]] (3,600 m)]]
Good avalanche safety is a continuous process, including route selection and examination of the snowpack, weather conditions, and human factors. Several well-known good habits can also minimize the risk. If local authorities issue avalanche risk reports, they should be considered and all warnings heeded.<ref>[http://www.avalanche.org/ Avalanche bulletins worldwide]</ref> Never follow in the tracks of others without your own evaluations. Observe the terrain and note obvious avalanche paths where vegetation is missing or damaged, where there are few surface anchors, and below cornices or ice formations. Avoid traveling below others who might trigger an avalanche.


Since the 1990s many more sophisticated models have been developed. In Europe much of the recent work was carried out as part of the SATSIE (Avalanche Studies and Model Validation in Europe) research project supported by the [[European Commission]]<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.leeds.ac.uk/satsie/ |title=SATSIE – Avalanche Studies and Model Validation in Europe |access-date=5 April 2008 |archive-date=12 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200612122550/http://www.leeds.ac.uk/satsie/ |url-status=dead}}</ref> which produced the leading-edge MN2L model, now in use with the ''Service Restauration des Terrains en Montagne'' (Mountain Rescue Service) in France, and D2FRAM (Dynamical Two-Flow-Regime Avalanche Model), which was still undergoing validation as of 2007.<ref name="final_report" /> Other known models are the SAMOS-AT avalanche simulation software<ref>{{cite web |url=http://arc.lib.montana.edu/snow-science/objects/issw-2009-0519-0523.pdf |title=Avalanche Simulation with SAMOS-AT |first1=Peter |last1=Sampl |first2=Matthias |last2=Granig |website=Archives and Special Collections – Montana State University Library |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220824211426/https://arc.lib.montana.edu/snow-science/objects/issw-2009-0519-0523.pdf |archive-date=Aug 24, 2022 }}</ref> and the RAMMS software.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Rapid Mass Movements System RAMMS |url=http://www.naturfare.no/_attachment/534838/binary/859980 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304060348/http://www.naturfare.no/_attachment/534838/binary/859980 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |access-date=19 May 2015}}</ref>
===Prevention===
{{main|Avalanche control}}
Preventative measures are employed in areas where avalanches pose a significant threat to people, such as [[ski resort]]s and mountain towns, roads and railways. There are several ways to prevent avalanches and lessen their power and destruction; active preventative measures reduce the likelihood and size of avalanches by disrupting the structure of the snow pack; passive measures reinforce and stabilize the snow pack in situ. The simplest active measure is by repeatedly traveling on a snow pack as snow accumulates; this can be by means of boot-packing, ski-cutting, or machine grooming. [[Explosive]]s are used extensively to prevent avalanches, by triggering smaller avalanches that break down instabilities in the snow pack, and removing over burden that can result in larger avalanches. Explosive charges are delivered by a number of methods including hand tossed charges, helicopter dropped bombs, Gazex concussion lines, and ballistic projectiles launched by air cannons and artillery. Passive preventive systems such as [[Snow fence]]s and light walls can be used to direct the placement of snow. Snow builds up around the fence, especially the side that faces the prevailing [[wind]]s. Downwind of the fence, snow buildup is lessened. This is caused by the loss of snow at the fence that would have been deposited and the pickup of the snow that is already there by the wind, which was depleted of snow at the fence. When there is a sufficient density of [[tree]]s, they can greatly reduce the strength of avalanches. They hold snow in place and when there is an avalanche, the impact of the snow against the trees slows it down. Trees can either be planted or they can be conserved, such as in the building of a ski resort, to reduce the strength of avalanches.


== Human involvement ==
To mitigate the effect of avalanches, artificial barriers can be very effective in reducing avalanche damage. There are several types. One kind of barrier ([[snow net]]) uses a net strung between poles that are anchored by [[guy wire]]s in addition to their foundations. These barriers are similar to those used for [[rockslide]]s. Another type of barrier is a rigid fence like structure ([[snow fence]]) and may be constructed of [[steel]], [[wood]] or pre-stressed [[concrete]]. They usually have gaps between the beams and are built perpendicular to the slope, with reinforcing beams on the downhill side. Rigid barriers are often considered unsightly, especially when many rows must be built. They are also expensive and vulnerable to damage from falling rocks in the warmer months. In addition to industrially manufactured barriers, landscaped barriers, called [[avalanche dam]]s stop or deflect avalanches with their weight and strength. These barriers are made out of concrete, rocks or earth. They are usually placed right above the structure, road or railway that they are trying to protect, although they can also be used to channel avalanches into other barriers. Occasionally, [[earth mound]]s are placed in the avalanche's path to slow it down. Finally, along transportation corridors, large shelters, called [[snow shed]]s, can be built directly in the slide path of an avalanche to protect traffic from avalanches.
[[File:Avalanche warning in Tuckerman.JPG|thumb|upright=1.2|[[United States Forest Service]] avalanche danger advisories.]]
[[File:Verbauung Tanngrindel.JPG|right|thumb|[[Snow fence]]s in [[Switzerland]] during summer.]]
[[File:Avalanche Blasting.jpg|thumb|Avalanche blasting in French [[ski resort]] [[Tignes]] (3,600&nbsp;m)]]
[[File:Avalanche warning Banff.jpg|thumb|upright|Avalanche warning sign near [[Banff, Alberta]]]]


=== How to prevent avalanches ===
===Safety in avalanche terrain===
{{Main|Avalanche control}}
*Terrain management - Terrain management involves reducing the exposure of an individual to the risks of traveling in avalanche terrain by carefully selecting what areas of slopes to travel on. Features to be cognizant of include not under cutting slopes (removing the physical support of the snow pack), not traveling over convex rolls (areas where the snow pack is under tension), staying away from weaknesses like exposed rock, and avoiding areas of slopes that expose one to terrain traps (gulleys that can be filled in, cliffs over which one can be swept, or heavy timber into which one can be carried).
Preventative measures are employed in areas where avalanches pose a significant threat to people, such as [[ski resort]]s, mountain towns, roads, and railways. There are several ways to prevent avalanches and lessen their power and develop preventative measures to reduce the likelihood and size of avalanches by disrupting the structure of the snowpack, while passive measures reinforce and stabilize the snowpack ''in situ''. The simplest active measure is repeatedly traveling on a snowpack as snow accumulates; this can be by means of boot-packing, ski-cutting, or [[Snow grooming|machine grooming]]. [[Explosive]]s are used extensively to prevent avalanches, by triggering smaller avalanches that break down instabilities in the snowpack, and removing overburden that can result in larger avalanches. Explosive charges are delivered by a number of methods including hand-tossed charges, helicopter-dropped bombs, Gazex concussion lines, and ballistic projectiles launched by air cannons and artillery. Passive preventive systems such as [[snow fence]]s and light walls can be used to direct the placement of snow. Snow builds up around the fence, especially the side that faces the prevailing [[wind]]s. Downwind of the fence, snow build-up is lessened. This is caused by the loss of snow at the fence that would have been deposited and the pickup of the snow that is already there by the wind, which was depleted of snow at the fence. When there is a sufficient density of [[tree]]s, they can greatly reduce the strength of avalanches. They hold snow in place and when there is an avalanche, the impact of the snow against the trees slows it down. Trees can either be planted or they can be conserved, such as in the building of a ski resort, to reduce the strength of avalanches.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Védrine |first1=Louis |last2=Li |first2=Xingyue |last3=Gaume |first3=Johan |date=2022-03-29 |title=Detrainment and braking of snow avalanches interacting with forests |url=https://nhess.copernicus.org/articles/22/1015/2022/ |journal=Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences |language=English |volume=22 |issue=3 |pages=1015–1028 |doi=10.5194/nhess-22-1015-2022 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2022NHESS..22.1015V |issn=1561-8633|hdl=20.500.11850/621336 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>


In turn, socio-environmental changes can influence the occurrence of damaging avalanches: some studies linking changes in land-use/land-cover patterns and the evolution of snow avalanche damage in mid latitude mountains show the importance of the role played by vegetation cover, that is at the root of the increase of damage when the protective forest is deforested (because of demographic growth, intensive grazing and industrial or legal causes), and at the root of the decrease of damage because of the transformation of a traditional land-management system based on [[overexploitation]] into a system based on land marginalization and reforestation, something that has happened mainly since the mid-20th century in mountain environments of developed countries.<ref name="García-Hernández et al., 2017">{{cite web|last=García-Hernández |first=C |title=Reforestation and land use change as drivers for a decrease of avalanche damage in mid-latitude mountains (NW Spain). Global and Planetary Change, 153:35–50|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/316750923|publisher=Elsevier |access-date=28 August 2017}}</ref>
*Group management - Group management is the practice of reducing the risk of having a member of a group, or a whole group involved in an avalanche. Minimize the number of people on the slope, and maintain separation. Ideally one person should pass over the slope into an area protected from the avalanche hazard before the next one leaves protective cover. Route selection should also consider what dangers lie above and below the route, and the consequences of an unexpected avalanche (i.e., unlikely to occur, but deadly if it does). Stop or camp only in safe locations. Wear warm gear to delay hypothermia if buried. Plan escape routes. In determining the size of the group balance the hazard of not having enough people to effectively carry out a rescue with the risk of having too many members of the group to safely manage the risks. It is generally recommended not to travel alone, because there will be no-one to witness your burial and start the rescue. Additionally, avalanche risk increases with use; that is, the more a slope is disturbed by [[skiing|skiers]], the more likely it is that an avalanche will occur.<ref name="Pascal Hageli et al" /> Most important of all practice good communication with in a group including clearly communicating the decisions about safe locations, escape routes, and slope choices, and having a clear understanding of every members skills in snow travel, avalanche rescue, and route finding.


=== Mitigation ===
*Risk Factor Awareness - Risk factor awareness in avalanche safety requires gathering and accounting for a wide range of information such as the meteorological history of the area, the current weather and snow conditions, and equally important the social and physical indicators of the group.
In many areas, regular avalanche tracks can be identified and precautions can be taken to minimize damage, such as the prevention of development in these areas. To mitigate the effect of avalanches the construction of artificial barriers can be very effective in reducing avalanche damage. There are several types: One kind of barrier ([[snow net]]) uses a net strung between poles that are anchored by [[guy wire]]s in addition to their foundations. These barriers are similar to those used for [[rockslide]]s. Another type of barrier is a rigid fence-like structure ([[snow fence]]) and may be constructed of [[steel]], [[wood]] or pre-stressed [[concrete]]. They usually have gaps between the beams and are built perpendicular to the slope, with reinforcing beams on the downhill side. Rigid barriers are often considered unsightly, especially when many rows must be built. They are also expensive and vulnerable to damage from falling rocks in the warmer months. In addition to industrially manufactured barriers, landscaped barriers, called [[avalanche dam]]s stop or deflect avalanches with their weight and strength. These barriers are made out of concrete, rocks, or earth. They are usually placed right above the structure, road, or railway that they are trying to protect, although they can also be used to channel avalanches into other barriers. Occasionally, [[earth mound]]s are placed in the avalanche's path to slow it down. Finally, along transportation corridors, large shelters, called [[snow shed]]s, can be built directly in the slide path of an avalanche to protect traffic from avalanches.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-08-12 |title=Snow Sheds and Avalanche Safety {{!}} TranBC |url=https://www.tranbc.ca/2011/11/30/avalanche-safety-shedding-light-on-the-snow-shed/ |access-date=2024-04-10 |language=en-US}}</ref>


=== Early warning systems ===
*Leadership - Leadership in avalanche terrain requires well defined decision making protocols that use the observed risk factors. These decision making frameworks are taught in a variety of courses provided by national avalanche resource centers in Europe and North America. Fundamental to leadership in avalanche terrain is honestly assessing and estimating the information that was ignored or overlooked. Recent research has shown that there are strong psychological and group dynamic determinants that lead to avalanche involvement.
Warning systems can detect avalanches which develop slowly, such as ice avalanches caused by icefalls from glaciers. Interferometric radars, high-resolution cameras, or motion sensors can monitor instable areas over a long term, lasting from days to years. Experts interpret the recorded data and are able to recognize upcoming ruptures in order to initiate appropriate measures. Such systems (e.g. the monitoring of the Weissmies glacier in Switzerland<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.geopraevent.ch/project/weissmies-glacier-velocities/?lang=en|title=Glacier monitoring Weissmies|access-date=23 October 2017}}</ref>) can recognize events several days in advance.


=== Alarm systems ===
==Human survival and avalanche rescue==
[[File:ZermattRadar.jpg|thumb|Radar station for avalanche monitoring in [[Zermatt]].<ref name="Zermatt" />]]
[[Image:Avalanche probe in use 2.JPG|thumb|left|To quickly find and rescue a person buried in an avalanche, a probe, beacon, and shovel are essential. The buried person must also be wearing an avalanche beacon.]] Even small avalanches are a serious danger to life, even with properly trained and equipped companions who avoid the avalanche. Between 55 and 65 percent of victims buried in the open are killed, and only 80 percent of the victims remaining on the surface survive. [[#References|(McClung, p.177)]].
Modern radar technology enables the monitoring of large areas and the localization of avalanches at any weather condition, by day and by night. Complex alarm systems are able to detect avalanches within a short time in order to close (e.g. roads and rails) or evacuate (e.g. construction sites) endangered areas. An example of such a system is installed on the only access road of Zermatt in Switzerland.<ref name="Zermatt">{{cite web|url=https://www.geopraevent.ch/project/avalanche-radar-zermatt/?lang=en|title=Avalanche Radar Zermatt|access-date=23 October 2017}}</ref> Two radars monitor the slope of a mountain above the road. The system automatically closes the road by activating several barriers and traffic lights within seconds such that no people are harmed.{{fact|date=January 2024}}


=== Survival, rescue, and recovery ===
Research carried out in [[Italy]]<ref>''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' vol. 368, p. 21.</ref> based on 422 buried [[skiing|skiers]] indicates how the chances of survival drop:
{{Main|Avalanche rescue}}
* very rapidly from 92 percent within 15 minutes to only 30 percent after 35 minutes (victims die of [[suffocation]])
Avalanche accidents are broadly differentiated into 2 categories: accidents in recreational settings, and accidents in residential, industrial, and transportation settings. This distinction is motivated by the observed difference in the causes of avalanche accidents in the two settings. In the recreational setting most accidents are caused by the people involved in the avalanche. In a 1996 study, Jamieson et al. (pages 7–20)<ref name="Jamieson 1996">{{cite web|last1=Jamieson |first1=Bruce |title=Avalanche Accidents in Canada Volume 4: 1984–1996 |url=http://avalancheinfo.net/Newsletters%20and%20Articles/Articles/AvalancheAccidentsV4.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110125095134/http://avalancheinfo.net/Newsletters%20and%20Articles/Articles/AvalancheAccidentsV4.pdf |url-status = dead|archive-date=25 January 2011 |publisher=Canadian Avalanche Association |access-date=7 March 2013 |first2=Torsten|last2=Geldstzer}}</ref> found that 83% of all avalanches in the recreational setting were caused by those who were involved in the [[accident]]. In contrast, all the accidents in the residential, industrial, and transportation settings were due to spontaneous natural avalanches. Because of the difference in the causes of avalanche accidents, and the activities pursued in the two settings, avalanche and disaster management professionals have developed two related preparedness, rescue, and recovery strategies for each of the settings.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
* near zero after two hours (victims die of [[Physical trauma|injuries]] or [[hypothermia]])
: (Historically, the chances of survival were estimated at 85% within 15 minutes, 50% within 30 minutes, 20% within one hour).
Consequently it is vital that everyone surviving an avalanche is used in an immediate search and rescue operation, rather than waiting for help to arrive. Additional help can be called once it can be determined if anyone is seriously injured or still remains unaccountable after the immediate search (i.e., after at least 30 minutes of searching). Even in a well equipped country such as [[France]], it typically takes 45 minutes for a helicopter rescue team to arrive, by which time most of the victims are likely to have died.


== Notable avalanches ==
In some cases avalanche victims are not located until spring thaw melts the snow, or even years later when objects emerge from a glacier.
{{See also|List of avalanches}}
Two avalanches occurred in March 1910 in the Cascade and Selkirk Mountain ranges; on 1 March the [[Wellington avalanche]] killed 96 in [[Washington (state)|Washington state]], United States. Three days later 62 railroad workers were killed in the [[Rogers Pass avalanche]] in [[British Columbia]], Canada.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Corp |first=Pelmorex |date=2021-03-04 |title=Canada's worst avalanche is the 1910 Rogers Pass disaster, a preventable tragedy |url=https://www.theweathernetwork.com/en/news/weather/severe/this-day-in-weather-history-march-4-1910-rogers-pass-avalanche |access-date=2024-04-10 |website=The Weather Network |language=en-ca}}</ref>


During [[World War I]], an estimated 40,000 to 80,000 soldiers died as a result of avalanches during the mountain campaign in the [[Alps]] at the [[Italian Campaign (World War I)|Austrian-Italian]] front, many of which were caused by [[artillery]] fire.<ref>Lee Davis (2008). "''[https://books.google.com/books?id=CRzMOYIuLJEC Natural Disasters]''". Infobase Publishing. p. 7. {{ISBN|0-8160-7000-8}}</ref><ref>Eduard Rabofsky et al., Lawinenhandbuch, Innsbruck, Verlaganstalt Tyrolia, 1986, p. 11</ref> Some 10,000 men, from both sides, died in avalanches in December 1916.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/soldiers-perish-in-avalanche-as-world-war-i-rages|title=Soldiers perish in avalanche as World War I rages|website=History.com}}</ref>
===Search and rescue equipment===
[[Image:Galtuer 1999.jpg|thumb|A [[Blackhawk helicopter]] as the crew prepares to evacuate tourists stranded by an avalanche in [[Galtür]], [[Austria]], on February 25, 1999.]]
Chances of a buried victim being found alive and rescued are increased when everyone in a group is carrying and using standard avalanche equipment, and have trained in how to use it. A beacon, shovel and probe is considered the minimum equipment to carry for companion rescue. Organized rescue involves ski patrols and mountain rescue teams who are often equipped with other technologies to search for buried victims. Rescue equipment can make a difference, and in 2010 the French National Association for the Study of Snow and Avalanches ([http://www.anena.org/espace_presse/communique_recco.pdf ANENA]) recommended that all off-piste skiers should carry beacons, probes, shovels, and Recco reflectors.


In the [[northern hemisphere]] winter of 1950–1951 approximately 649 avalanches were recorded in a three-month period throughout the [[Alps]] in Austria, France, Switzerland, Italy and Germany. This series of avalanches killed around 265 people and was termed the [[Winter of Terror (1951)|Winter of Terror]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |date=2023-02-18 |title=Deadliest Avalanches In History |url=https://www.worldatlas.com/natural-disasters/deadliest-avalanches-in-history.html |access-date=2024-04-10 |website=WorldAtlas |language=en-US}}</ref>
====Avalanche cords====
The use of avalanche cords goes back just over 100 years to a Bavarian mountaineer named Eugen Oertel. In the United States the concept was recommended as early as 1908 in the Colorado newspaper - the Ouray Herald (November 13) - when the editor repeated the suggestion that miners in the San Juans Mounains adopt "snowslide ribbons" to safeguard their travels to and from the mines.<ref name="Atkins, D 2009">(2009) Atkins, D. History 101: Avalanche cords. The Avalanche Review vol. 27, no. 3, February 2009.</ref> The principle is simple. An approximately 15 meter long red cord (similar to parachute cord) is attached to the person in question's belt. While skiing, snowboarding, or walking the cord is dragged along behind the person. The assumption is that if the person gets buried in an avalanche, the light cord stays on top of the snow. Due to the color the cord would be easily visible for companions. Commercial avalanche cords have metal markings every one to three meters indicating the direction and length to the victim.


A mountain climbing camp on Lenin Peak, in what is now Kyrgyzstan, was wiped out in 1990 when an earthquake triggered a large avalanche that overran the camp.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/07/18/world/avalanche-kills-40-climbers-in-soviet-central-asia.html | work=The New York Times | first=Francis X. | last=Clines | title=Avalanche Kills 40 Climbers in Soviet Central Asia | date=18 July 1990}}</ref> Forty-three climbers were killed.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.centralasia-travel.com/en/expeditions/lenin/history/ |title=Lenin Peak. Historical background of Lenin Peak. The first expedition to Lenin Peak |publisher=Centralasia-travel.com |access-date=21 June 2013}}</ref>
Avalanche cords were popular before beacons became available, and while cords were thought to be effective markers there was never any proof of their effectiveness. In the 1970s Melchoir Schild of the Swiss Federal Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research (SLF) reviewed 30 years of Swiss avalanche accidents and rescues from 1944/45 to 1973/74. Of the 2042 avalanche victims he found only seven cases where avalanche cords were used (not including the 2 mentioned above). In five cases part of the cord was visible on the surface but so too were part of the victims. In the sixth case the victim was completely buried, but part of the cord was visible. Sadly, this victim died of trauma. In the seventh case the completely buried avalanche cord was located by an avalanche rescue dog, however, the cord had become detached from the victim. Her body was found much later. In Knox Williams' and Betsy Armstrong's 1986 book The Avalanche Book they cite an early 1970s study where avalanche cords were tested on sandbag dummies. The dummies were placed onto steep slopes where explosives were used to trigger avalanches. Trials showed a portion of the cord remained on the surface only 40% of the time. The other 60% of the time the cord was completely buried along with the dummy. Typically the cord had spooled around the dummy. 1975, at a symposium of avalanche rescue experts hosted by the International Foundation Vanni Eigenmann, Schild concluded, “On the basis of these results the avalanche cord can no longer be considered reliable.”<ref name="Atkins, D 2009"/>


In 1993, the [[1993 Bayburt Üzengili avalanche|Bayburt Üzengili avalanche]] killed 60 individuals in [[Üzengili, Bayburt|Üzengili]] in the province of [[Bayburt Province|Bayburt]], [[Turkey]].<ref name=":0" />
In the United States there have been two accidents with five buried victims, all wearing avalanche cords. In one accident, an avalanche cord remained on the surface. In the second accident five ski mountaineers with cords deployed triggered an avalanche. One skier was partly buried, but his four friends and cords were completely buried. Moderate snow and the loss of the survivor’s eyeglasses only worsened the situation. The search was called off a few days later. The four were eventually found many months later after their bodies with attached cords melted out of the snow. On one victim the cord was wrapped tightly around the body.


A large avalanche in [[Montroc, France]], in 1999, 300,000&nbsp;cubic metres of snow slid on a 30° slope, achieving a speed in the region of {{convert|100|km/h|mph|abbr=on}}. It killed 12 people in their chalets under 100,000&nbsp;tons of snow, {{convert|5|m|ft|abbr=off|sp=us}} deep. The mayor of [[Chamonix]] was convicted of second-degree murder for not evacuating the area, but received a suspended sentence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://pistehors.com/backcountry/wiki/Articles/Montroc-Avalanche|title=Montroc Avalanche|website=pistehors.com}}</ref>
The avalanche cord should not be used or accepted as being an adequate sole safety measure.


The small Austrian village of [[Galtür]] was hit by the [[1999 Galtür avalanche|Galtür avalanche]] in 1999. The village was thought to be in a safe zone but the avalanche was exceptionally large and flowed into the village. Thirty-one people died.{{fact|date=January 2024}}
====Beacons====
{{main|Avalanche transceiver}}
Beacons &mdash; known as "beepers", peeps (pieps), ARVAs (''Appareil de Recherche de Victimes en Avalanche'', in French), LVS (''Lawinen-Verschütteten-Suchgerät'', Swiss German), avalanche [[transceiver]]s, or various other trade names, are important for every member of the party. They emit a "beep" via 457&nbsp;kHz radio signal in normal use, but may be switched to receive mode to locate a buried victim up to 80 meters away. Analog receivers provide audible beeps that rescuers interpret to estimate distance to a victim. To use the receiver effectively requires regular practice. Some older models of beepers operated on a different frequency (2.275&nbsp;kHz ) and a group leader should ensure these are no longer in use.


On 1 December 2000, the [[Glory Bowl Avalanche]] formed on Mt. Glory which is located within the [[Teton Range|Teton Mountain Range]] in Wyoming, United States. Joel Roof was snowboarding recreationally in this backcountry, bowl-shaped run and triggered the avalanche. He was carried nearly 2,000 feet to the base of the mountain and was not successfully rescued.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.meted.ucar.edu/afwa/avalanche/navmenu.php|title=Avalanche Weather Forecasting|author=COMET Program|year=2010|website=meted.ucar.edu/afwa/avalanche/index.htm|publisher=University Corporation for Atmospheric Research}}</ref>
Since about 2000 nearly all avalanche rescue transceivers use digital displays to give visual indications of direction and distance to victims. Most users find these beacons easier to use, but to be effective still requires considerable practice by the user. Beacons are the primary rescue tool for companion rescue and are considered active devices because the user must learn to use and care for their device.


On 28 January 2003, the [[2003 Tatra Mountains avalanche|Tatra Mountains avalanche]] swept away nine out of a thirteen-member group heading to the summit of [[Rysy]] in the [[Tatra Mountains]]. The participants of the trip were students from the [[I Leon Kruczkowski High School]] in [[Tychy]] and individuals associated with the school's sports club.
====Probes====
[[File:Avalanche-security search and rescue equipment.jpg|thumb|right|250px|avalanche security, search and rescue equipment (left to right): avalanche airbag system, collapsed probe, [[shovel]], [[avalanche transceiver]]]]
Portable (collapsible) probes can be extended to probe into the snow to locate the exact location of a victim at several yards / metres in depth. When multiple victims are buried, probes should be used to decide the order of rescue, with the shallowest being dug out first since they have the greatest chance of survival.


On 3 July 2022 a [[2022 Marmolada serac collapse|serac collapsed]] on the [[Marmolada Glacier]], [[Italy]], causing an avalanche that killed 11 alpinists and injured eight.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-07-09 |title=NEWS: Marmolada Serac Collapse - 'A tragedy for the whole valley and alpine community' |url=https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2022/07/marmolada_serac_collapse_-_a_tragedy_for_the_whole_valley_and_alpine_community-73093 |access-date=2024-04-10 |website=www.ukclimbing.com |language=en}}</ref>
Probing can be a very time-consuming process if a thorough search is undertaken for a victim without a beacon. In the U.S., 86% of the 140 victims found (since 1950) by probing were already dead. <sup>[http://outsideonline.com/outside/magazine/200002/200002ava_whitedeath7.html]</sup> Survival/rescue more than 2 m deep is rare (about 4%). Probes should be used immediately after a visual search for surface clues, in coordination with the beacon search.


== Classification of avalanches ==
====Shovels====
=== European avalanche risk ===
Even when the snowpack consists of loose powder, avalanche debris is hard and dense. The energy of the avalanche causes the snow to melt, and the debris refreezes immediately after it stops.
In [[Europe]], the avalanche risk is widely rated on the following scale, which was adopted in April 1993 to replace the earlier non-standard national schemes. Descriptions were last updated in May 2003 to enhance uniformity.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.slf.ch/laworg/muenchen2003-fr.pdf|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20050417204931/http://www.slf.ch/laworg/muenchen2003-fr.pdf|url-status=dead|title=Qu'est-ce qui est NOUVEAU dans la description du danger d'avalanche ?|archivedate=17 April 2005}}</ref>


In France, most avalanche deaths occur at risk levels 3 and 4. In Switzerland most occur at levels 2 and 3. It is thought that this may be due to national differences of interpretation when assessing the risks.<ref>''[http://skirando.com/images/avalanche/avalanche-accidents-2006.pdf An Analysis of French Avalanche Accidents for 2005–2006] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080908031710/http://skirando.com/images/avalanche/avalanche-accidents-2006.pdf |date=8 September 2008}}''</ref>
Shovels are essential for digging through the snow to the victim, as the snow is often too dense to dig with hands or skis. A large strong scoop and sturdy handle are important. '''Plastic shovels often break''', whereas metal ones are less prone to failure.<ref name=genswein>[http://www.ikar-cisa.org/ikar-cisa/documents/2008/ikar20080406000196.pdf "V-Shaped Conveyor-Belt Approach to Snow Transport"] Genswein, Manuel and Ragnhild Eide, The Avalanche Review vol. 26, no. 3, February 2008</ref>

As excavation of the avalanche victim is extremely time-consuming and many buried victims suffocate before they can be reached, shovelling technique is an essential element of rescue.<ref name=genswein/>

Shovels are also useful for digging snow pits as part of evaluating the snow pack for hidden hazards, such as weak layers supporting large loads.

====RECCO Rescue System====
The Recco system is used by organized rescue services around the world. The Recco system is a two-part system where the rescue team uses a small hand-held detector. The detector receives a directional signal that is reflected back from a small, passive, transponder called a reflector that is included into outerwear, boots, helmets, and body protection. Recco reflectors are not a substitute for avalanche beacons. The Recco signal does not interfere with beacons. In fact, the current Recco detector also has an avalanche beacon receiver (457&nbsp;kHz) so one rescuer can search for a Recco signal and a beacon signal at the same time.

====Avalung====
Recently, a device called an Avalung has been introduced for use in avalanche terrain. The device consists of a mouth piece, a flap valve, an exhaust pipe, and an air collector. Several models of Avalung either mount on one's chest or integrate in a proprietary backpack.

During an avalanche burial, victims not killed by trauma usually suffer from asphyxiation as the snow around them melts from the heat of the victim's breath and then refreezes, disallowing oxygen flow to the victim and allowing toxic levels of CO<sub>2</sub> to accumulate. The Avalung ameliorates this situation by drawing breath over a large surface area in front and pushing the warm exhaled carbon dioxide behind. This buys additional time for rescuers to dig the victim out.<ref>[http://outsideonline.com/outside/features/200506/buried-alive.html "I Was an Avalanche Test Dummy"], Lindsay Yaw, ''[[Outside (magazine)|Outside]]'', accessed 9/26/08</ref>

====Avalanche airbags====
Avalanche airbags help a person avoid burial by making the user an even larger object relative to the moving snow, which forces the person toward the surface. Avalanche airbags work on the principle of inverse segregation.<ref>Tschirky, F., Bernhard, B. and Kern, M. (2000). “Avalanche Rescue Systems in Switzerland: Experience and Limitations.” In Proceedings International Snow Science Workshop, Big Sky, MT, USA, October 2000.</ref> Avalanches, like mixed nuts and breakfast cereal are considered granular materials and behave fluid-like (but are not liquids) where smaller particles settle to the bottom of the flow and larger particles rise to the top. Provided the airbag is properly deployed, the chances of a complete burial are significantly reduced.

====Other devices====
More backcountry adventurers are also carrying Satellite Electronic Notification Devices (SEND) to quickly alert rescuers to a problem. These devices include the [[SPOT Satellite GPS Messenger|SPOT]] Messenger, [[Emergency Position-Indicating Radio Beacon]] (EPIRB) or Personal Locating Beacons (PLBs) containing the [[Global Positioning System]] (GPS). This device can quickly notify search and rescue of an emergency and the general location (within 100 yards), but only if the person with the EPIRB has survived the avalanche and can activate the device. Survivors should also try to use a [[mobile phone]] to notify emergency personnel. Unlike the other devices mentioned above, the mobile phone (or satellite phone) provides two-way communications with rescuers.

On-site rescuers (usually companions) are in the best position to save a buried victim. However, organized rescue teams can sometimes respond very quickly to assist in the search for a buried victim. The sooner organized rescue can be notified the sooner they can respond, and this difference can mean the difference in living or dying for a critically injured patient. The International Commission for Alpine Rescue recommends, “early notification is essential, e.g., by mobile phone, satellite phone, or radio, wherever possible” <ref>ICAR. ''Avalanche Safety Devices and Systems''. ICAR-IKAR-CISA Statement. International Commission for Alpine Rescue. Kranjska Gora, Slovenia October 14, 2006.</ref>

Other rescue devices are proposed, developed and used, such as avalanche balls, vests and airbags, based on statistics indicating that decreasing the depth of burial increases the chances of survival.

Although inefficient, some rescue equipment can be improvised by unprepared parties: ski poles can become short probes, skis or snowboards can be used as shovels. A [[wilderness first aid|first aid]] kit and equipment is useful for assisting survivors who may have cuts, broken bones, or other injuries, in addition to [[hypothermia]].

===Self-rescue===
Victims caught in an avalanche are advised to try to escape to side of the avalanche. If not possible, grab onto a tree, brush or rock (each second one hangs on lets snow pass by that cannot bury one). If knocked off one's feet, then jettison their equipment (if possible) and FIGHT for your life. Rolling like a log may help one escape to the side. Conventional wisdom says to make swimming motions to stay on the surface. Anecdotal stories tell successes; however, analysis of avalanche motion and physics dispute swimming.<ref>Ballard, L. and D. Atkins. ''Avalanche Rescue Fundamentals''. Lakewood. 2010 ISBN 978-0-929752-03-7</ref> Avalanches stop quickly and if under the snow it is critical to get a hand in front of the face to create an airspace before the snow stops. If one is near the surface they may try to thrust an arm, leg or object above the surface. If it is possible, try to break free once the snow stops. If unable to move do not struggle except to enlarge the air space.

===Companion rescue===
[[Image:Avalanche path 7271.JPG|thumb|right|250px|Periodic winter avalanches on this 800 m high slope transport woody debris to the flat in the foreground.]]
Survival time is short, if a victim is buried. The search for victims must start immediately; many people have died because the surviving companions or witnesses failed to do even the simplest search.

Witnesses to an avalanche that engulfs people are frequently limited to those in the party involved in the avalanche. Those not caught should try to note the locations where the avalanched person or persons were last seen. In fact, anyone planning to enter an avalanche area should discuss this step as part of their preparation. Once the avalanche has stopped and the danger of secondary slides has passed, witnesses should mark these points with objects for reference. Then, survivors should take a headcount to determine who may be lost. If the area is safe to enter, the searchers should visually scan along a downslope trajectory from the marked points last seen. Victims who are partially or shallowly buried can often be located quickly by visually scanning the avalanche debris and pulling out clothing or equipment that may be attached to someone buried.

Because survival rates plummet as time passes, do not send a searcher for help until you feel you can do no more. However, do use your mobile phone or radio to call for help as soon as you suspect a burial. Generally, the telephone connection will be better from the top of a slope than from the bottom. Go to and mark the Last Seen Area, switch transceivers to receive mode, and check them. Select likely burial areas and search them, listening for beeps (or voices), expanding to other areas of the avalanche, always looking and listening for other clues (movement, equipment, body parts). Probe randomly in probable burial areas. Mark any points where signal was received or equipment found. Continue scanning and probing near marked clues and other likely burial areas. After 30 to 60 minutes, consider sending a searcher to get more help, because at this point, the remaining victims have probably not survived.

Line probes are arranged in most likely burial areas and marked as searched. Continue searching and probing the area until it is no longer feasible or reasonable to continue. Avoid contaminating the scent of the avalanche area with urine, food, spit, blood, etc., in case search dogs arrive.

Buried victims are most likely to be found--

* Below the marked point last seen
* Along the line of flow of the avalanche
* Around trees and rocks or other obstacles
* Near the bottom runout of the debris
* Along edges of the avalanche track
* In low spots where the snow may collect (gullies, crevasses, creeks, ditches along roads, etc.)

Although less likely, check other areas if initial searches are not fruitful.

Once buried victims are found and their heads and chests are freed, perform [[Wilderness first aid|first aid]] (airway, breathing, circulation/pulse, arterial bleeding, spinal injuries, fractures, shock, hypothermia, internal injuries, etc.), according to local law and custom.

===Organized rescue===
Professional and volunteer rescue teams respond when a victim needs more help than their companions can provide. Traditionally, organized rescue responded after companion rescue efforts failed. However, today, thanks to mobile telephones, helicopters and snow-machines, the distinction between ''organized'' and ''companion'' rescue sometimes blur together as organized rescue can respond quickly to assist companions. In a some cases in recent years, organized rescue has even replaced companion rescue and saved lives when organized rescue teams reached the debris before the victim's companions.<ref>Atkins, D. ''Time to Change Rescue Attitudes for a New Generation''. In Proceedings International Snow Science Workshop, Whistler, BC, CANADA, September 2008</ref>

There are four primary goals of any rescue operation and in organized rescue the goals can be initiated simultaneously.
* Immediate search: get rescuers to the site; find and uncover buried victims.
* Medical: care for victims and companions
* Transport/evacuation: transport rescuers in quickly and safely; get victims out and to advanced medical care; return rescuers safely
* Support/Logistics: care for rescuers in the field (food, shelter, rest and replacement)

==== Immediate search ====
The first teams travel fast and light to locate and uncover buried victims. These teams carry basic rescue equipment, including rescue dogs and RECCO detectors, and emergency-care gear. These rescuers are generally not equipped for prolonged operations.

==== Medical ====
While the immediate search teams carry some basic medical equipment, a special team that can provide advanced life-support follows quickly. This team usually includes paramedic, trauma nurse, or physician, and may also transport in a rescue toboggan and other equipment needed to revive, stabilize, protect and transport their patient.

==== Transport/evacuation ====
Upon the first alert of an avalanche incident the rescue leader will appoint a team to arrange transportation for both rescuers and patients.

==== Support/logistics ====
Rescue leaders will assess the complexity of the search and rescue operation to determine and anticipate the needs for support. Every incident is different depending upon the number of victims, avalanche danger, weather conditions, terrain, access, availability of rescuers, etc. Support includes getting appropriate resources of people and equipment, transporting the resources, caring for and replacing rescuers.

In the United States ''all'' agencies are mandated to manage search and rescue operations, including avalanche, under the Incident Command System [[Incident command system|(ICS)]].

===Myths about avalanches===
'''Myth: Avalanches can be triggered by shouting''' - Avalanches cannot be triggered by sound as the forces exerted by the pressures in sound waves are far too low. The very large shockwaves produced by explosions can trigger avalanches, however, if they are close enough to the surface.<ref name=colorado>[http://geosurvey.state.co.us/Default.aspx?tabid=400 "Mitigation and Land Use - Avalanches"], Colorado Geological Survey</ref>

'''Myth: Spitting while covered in snow can determine the direction upwards''' - Spitting while covered in snow is not helpful because when the snow has settled it becomes very solid and most of the time, moving is not possible.<ref>http://www.mountaineersbooks.org/client/client_pages/Media%20Archives/mtn_media_AvalancheMyths.cfm "Avalanche Myths"</ref>

==Notable avalanches==
{{see also|List of avalanches}}
Two avalanches occurred in March 1910 in the Cascade and Selkirk Mountain ranges; On March 1 the [[Wellington avalanche]] killed 96 in [[Washington (U.S. state)|Washington State]], United States. Three days later 62 railroad workers were killed in the [[Rogers Pass avalanche]] in [[British Columbia]], Canada.

During [[World War I]], an estimated 40,000 to 80,000 soldiers died as a result of avalanches during the mountain campaign in the [[Alps]] at the [[Austria]]n-[[Italy|Italian]] front, many of which were caused by [[artillery]] fire.<ref>Lee Davis (2008). "''[http://books.google.com/books?id=CRzMOYIuLJEC&pg=&dq&hl=en#v=onepage&q=&f=false Natural Disasters]''". Infobase Publishing. p.7. ISBN 0816070008</ref><ref>Eduard Rabofsky et al., Lawininenhandbuch, Innsbruck, Verlaganstalt Tyrolia, 1986, p. 11</ref> Some 10,000 men, from both sides, lost their lives in avalanches in December 1916.<ref>[http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/soldiers-perish-in-avalanche-as-world-war-i-rages History Channel - December 13, 1916: Soldiers perish in avalanche as World War I rages]</ref> However, it is very doubtful avalanches were used deliberately at the tactical level as weapons; more likely they were simply a side effect to shelling enemy troops, occasionally adding to the toll taken by the artillery. Avalanche prediction is nearly impossible; forecasters can only assert the conditions, terrain and relative likelihood of slides with the help of detailed weather reports and from localized [[snowpack]] observation. It would be almost impossible to predict avalanche conditions many miles behind enemy lines, making it impossible to intentionally target a slope at risk for avalanches. Also, high priority targets received continual shelling and would be unable to build up enough unstable snow to form devastating avalanches, effectively imitating the avalanche prevention programs at [[ski resort]]s.

In the [[northern hemisphere]] winter of 1950-1951 approximately 649 avalanches were recorded in a three month period throughout the [[Alps]] in [[Austria]], [[France]], [[Switzerland]], [[Italy]] and [[Germany]]. This series of avalanches killed around 265 humans and was termed the [[Winter of Terror (1951)|Winter of Terror]].

In 1993, the [[1993 Bayburt Üzengili avalanche|Bayburt Üzengili avalanche]] killed 60 individuals in Üzengili in the province of [[Bayburt]], [[Turkey]].
A large avalanche in [[Montroc, France]], in 1999, 300,000 cubic metres of snow slid on a 30° slope, achieving a speed of 100&nbsp;km/h (60&nbsp;mph). It killed 12 people in their chalets under 100,000 tons of snow, 5 meters (15&nbsp;ft) deep. The mayor of [[Chamonix]] was convicted of second-degree murder for not evacuating the area, but received a suspended sentence.<ref>[http://www.pistehors.com/backcountry/wiki/Articles/Montroc-Avalanche PisteHors.com: Montroc Avalanche]</ref>

The small Austrian village of [[Galtür]] was hit by the [[Galtür Avalanche|Galtür avalanche]] in 1999. The village was thought to be in a safe zone but the avalanche was exceptionally large and flowed into the village. Thirty-one people died.

==European avalanche risk table==
In [[Europe]], the avalanche risk is widely rated on the following scale, which was adopted in April 1993 to replace the earlier non-standard national schemes. Descriptions were last updated in May 2003 to enhance uniformity. <sup>[http://www.slf.ch/laworg/muenchen2003-fr.pdf]</sup>

In France, most avalanche deaths occur at risk levels 3 and 4. In Switzerland most occur at levels 2 and 3. It is thought that this may be due to national differences of interpretation when assessing the risks.<ref>''[http://skirando.com/images/avalanche/avalanche-accidents-2006.pdf An Analysis of French Avalanche Accidents for 2005-2006]''</ref>


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
!width="10%"|Risk Level
!width="25%"|Snow Stability
!width="10%"|Flag
!width="55%"|Avalanche Risk
|-
|-
! style="width:10%;"|Risk Level
|1 - Low
! style="width:25%;"|Snow Stability
! style="width:10%;"|Icon
! style="width:55%;"|Avalanche Risk
|-
|1 – Low
|Snow is generally very stable.
|Snow is generally very stable.
| align="center" | [[Image:Avalanche-risk-1-2.svg|64px]]
| style="text-align:center;"| [[File:Avalanche low danger level.svg|x64px]]
|Avalanches are unlikely except when heavy loads [2] are applied on a very few extreme steep slopes. Any spontaneous avalanches will be minor (sluffs). In general, safe conditions.
|Avalanches are unlikely except when heavy loads are applied on a few extreme steep slopes. Any spontaneous avalanches will be minor sloughs. In general, safe conditions.
|-
|-
|2 - Limited
|2 Moderate
|On some steep slopes the snow is only moderately stable [1]. Elsewhere it is very stable.
|On some steep slopes the snow is only moderately stable. Elsewhere it is very stable.
| align="center" | [[Image:Avalanche-risk-1-2.svg|64px]]
| style="text-align:center;"| [[File:Avalanche moderate danger level.svg|x64px]]
|Avalanches may be triggered when heavy [2] loads are applied, especially on a few generally identified steep slopes. Large spontaneous avalanches are not expected.
|Avalanches may be triggered when heavy loads are applied, especially on a few generally identified steep slopes. Large spontaneous avalanches are not expected.
|-
|-
|3 - Medium
|3 Considerable
|On many steep slopes [1] the snow is only moderately or weakly stable.
|On many steep slopes the snow is only moderately or weakly stable.
| align="center" | [[Image:Avalanche-risk.svg|64px]]
| style="text-align:center;"| [[File:Avalanche considerable danger level.svg|x64px]]
|Avalanches may be triggered on many slopes even if only light loads [2] are applied. On some slopes, medium or even fairly large spontaneous avalanches may occur.
|Avalanches may be triggered on many slopes even if only light loads are applied. On some slopes, medium or even fairly large spontaneous avalanches may occur.
|-
|-
|4 - High
|4 High
|On most steep slopes [1] the snow is not very stable.
|On most steep slopes the snow is not very stable.
| align="center" | [[Image:Avalanche-risk.svg|64px]]
| style="text-align:center;"| [[File:Avalanche high or very high danger level.svg|x64px]]
|Avalanches are likely to be triggered on many slopes even if only light loads [2] are applied. In some places, many medium or sometimes large spontaneous avalanches are likely.
|Avalanches are likely to be triggered on many slopes even if only light loads are applied. In some places, many medium or sometimes large spontaneous avalanches are likely.
|-
|-
|5 - Very High
|5 Very High
|The snow is generally unstable.
|The snow is generally unstable.
| align="center" | [[Image:Avalanche-risk-5.svg|64px]]
| style="text-align:center;"| [[File:Avalanche high or very high danger level.svg|x64px]]
|Even on gentle slopes, many large spontaneous avalanches are likely to occur.
|Even on gentle slopes, many large spontaneous avalanches are likely to occur.
|}
|}


'''[1] Stability:'''
'''[1] Stability:'''
*Generally described in more detail in the avalanche bulletin (regarding the altitude, aspect, type of terrain etc.)
* Generally described in more detail in the avalanche bulletin (regarding the altitude, aspect, type of terrain etc.)


'''[2] additional load:'''
'''[2] additional load:'''
*heavy: two or more skiers or boarders without spacing between them, a single [[hiking|hiker]] or [[climbing|climber]], a grooming machine, avalanche blasting.
* heavy: two or more skiers or boarders without spacing between them, a single [[hiking|hiker]] or [[climbing|climber]], a grooming machine, avalanche blasting
*light: a single skier or snowboarder smoothly linking turns and without falling, a group of skiers or snowboarders with a minimum 10 m gap between each person, a single person on [[snowshoe]]s.
* light: a single skier or snowboarder smoothly linking turns and without falling, a group of skiers or snowboarders with a minimum 10&nbsp;m gap between each person, a single person on [[snowshoe]]s

'''Gradient:'''
'''Gradient:'''
*gentle slopes: with an incline below about 30°.
* gentle slopes: with an incline below about 30°
*steep slopes: with an incline over 30°.
* steep slopes: with an incline over 30°
*very steep slopes: with an incline over 35°.
* very steep slopes: with an incline over 35°
*extremely steep slopes: extreme in terms of the incline (over 40°), the terrain profile, proximity of the ridge, smoothness of underlying ground.
* extremely steep slopes: extreme in terms of the incline (over 40°), the terrain profile, proximity of the ridge, smoothness of underlying ground


==European avalanche size table==
=== European avalanche size table ===
'''Avalanche size:'''
'''Avalanche size:''' {{Citation needed|date=January 2019}}
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
!width="10%"|Size
!width="35%"|Runout
!width="35%"|Potential Damage
!width="20%"|Physical Size
|-
|-
! style="width:10%;"|Size
|1 - Sluff
! style="width:35%;"|Runout
! style="width:35%;"|Potential Damage
! style="width:20%;"|Physical Size
|-
|1 – Sluff
|Small snow slide that cannot bury a person, though there is a danger of falling.
|Small snow slide that cannot bury a person, though there is a danger of falling.
|Unlikely, but possible risk of injury or death to people.
|Unlikely, but possible risk of injury or death to people.
|length <50 m <br>volume <100 m³
|length <50&nbsp;m <br />volume <100&nbsp;m<sup>3</sup>
|-
|-
|2 - Small
|2 Small
|Stops within the slope.
|Stops within the slope.
|Could bury, injure or kill a person.
|Could bury, injure or kill a person.
|length <100 m <br>volume <1,000 m³
|length <100&nbsp;m <br />volume <1,000&nbsp;m<sup>3</sup>
|-
|-
|3 - Medium
|3 Medium
|Runs to the bottom of the slope.
|Runs to the bottom of the slope.
|Could bury and destroy a car, damage a truck, destroy small buildings or break trees.
|Could bury and destroy a car, damage a truck, destroy small buildings or break trees.
|length <1,000 m <br>volume <10,000 m³
|length <1,000&nbsp;m <br />volume <10,000&nbsp;m<sup>3</sup>
|-
|-
|4 - Large
|4 Large
|Runs over flat areas (significantly less than 30°) of at least 50 m in length, may reach the valley bottom.
|Runs over flat areas (significantly less than 30°) of at least 50&nbsp;m in length, may reach the valley bottom.
|Could bury and destroy large trucks and trains, large buildings and forested areas.
|Could bury and destroy large trucks and trains, large buildings and forested areas.
|length >1,000 m <br>volume >10,000 m³
|length >1,000&nbsp;m <br />volume >10,000&nbsp;m<sup>3</sup>
|}
|}


==North American Avalanche Danger Scale==
=== North American Avalanche Danger Scale ===
In the [[United States]] and [[Canada]], the following avalanche danger scale is used. Descriptors vary depending on country.
In the United States and Canada, the following avalanche danger scale is used. Descriptors vary depending on country.[[File:Danger Scale - English.jpg|Danger Scale – English|alt=|703x703px|center|frameless]]


=== Avalanche problems ===
[[File:Danger Scale - English.jpg|thumb|right|Danger Scale - English]]
There are nine different types of avalanche problems:<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.avalanche.ca/glossary|title=Avalanche Canada|website=avalanche.ca|access-date=25 March 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://avalanche.org/avalanche-encyclopedia/|title=Avalanche Encyclopedia|website=Avalanche.org|access-date=25 March 2020}}</ref>
* Storm slab
* Wind slab
* Wet slab avalanches
* Persistent slab
* Deep persistent slab
* Loose dry avalanches
* Loose wet avalanches
* Glide avalanches
* Cornice fall{{fact|date=January 2024}}


==Canadian classification for avalanche size==
=== Canadian classification for avalanche size ===
The Canadian classification for avalanche size is based upon the consequences of the avalanche. Half sizes are commonly used.<ref name = "backcountryavalancheawareness" />
The Canadian classification for avalanche size is based upon the consequences of the avalanche. Half sizes are commonly used.<ref name="backcountryavalancheawareness">{{cite book|last=Jamieson|first=Bruce|title=Backcountry Avalanche Awareness|publisher=[[Canadian Avalanche Association]]|year=2000|isbn=0-9685856-1-2}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
!width="5%"|Size
! style="width:5%;"|Size
!width="95%"|Destructive Potential
! style="width:95%;"|Destructive Potential
|-
|-
|1
|1
Line 339: Line 267:
|-
|-
|4
|4
|Could destroy a railway car, large truck, several buildings or a forest area up to 4 hectares.
|Could destroy a railway car, large truck, several buildings or a forest area up to 4&nbsp;hectares.
|-
|-
|5
|5
|Largest snow avalanche known. Could destroy a village or a forest of 40 hectares.
|Largest snow avalanche known. Could destroy a village or a forest of 40&nbsp;hectares.
|}
|}


==United States classification for avalanche size==
=== United States classification for avalanche size ===
The size of avalanches are classified using two scales; size relative to destructive force or D-scale and size relative to the avalanche path or R-scale.<ref name="Snow-2010">{{Cite book|title=Snow, weather, and avalanches : observation guidelines for avalanche programs in the United States|others=American Avalanche Association,, National Avalanche Center |year = 2010|isbn=978-0-9760118-1-1|location=Pagosa Springs, CO|oclc=798732486}}</ref><ref name="AmAvalAssoc">{{cite web|url=https://www.americanavalancheassociation.org/swag|title=SWAGuidelines|website=American Avalanche Association|access-date=26 March 2020}}</ref> Both size scales range from 1 to 5 with the D size scale half sizes can be used.<ref name="Snow-2010" /><ref name="AmAvalAssoc" />
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
!width="5%"|Size
!width="95%"|Destructive Potential<ref name="backcountryavalancheawareness">{{cite book
| last = Jamieson
| first = Bruce
| title = Backcountry Avalanche Awareness
| publisher = [[Canadian Avalanche Association]]
| year = 2000
| isbn = 0-9685856-1-2}}
</ref>
|-
|-
!Size Relative to Path
|1
|Sluff or snow that slides less than 50m (150') of slope distance.
|-
|-
|R1~Very small, relative to the path.
|2
|Small, relative to path.
|-
|-
|R2~Small, relative to the path
|3
|Medium, relative to path.
|-
|-
|R3~Medium, relative to the path
|4
|Large, relative to path.
|-
|-
|R4~Large, relative to the path
|5
|-
|Major or maximum, relative to path.
|R5~Major or maximum, relative to the path
|}
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! colspan="4" |Size – Destructive Force
|-
|code
|
|mass
|length
|-
|D1
|Relatively harmless to people
|<10 t
|10 m
|-
|D2
|Could bury, injure, or kill a person
|10<sup>2</sup> t
|100 m
|-
|D3
|Could bury and destroy a car, damage a truck, destroy a wood-frame house, or break a few trees
|10<sup>3</sup> t
|1000 m
|-
|D4
|Could destroy a railway car, large truck, several buildings, or substantial amount of forest
|10<sup>4</sup> t
|2000 m
|-
|D5
|Could gouge the landscape. Largest snow avalanche known
|10<sup>5</sup> t
|3000 m
|}
|}


=== Rutschblock Test ===
==See also==
Slab avalanche hazard analysis can be done using the Rutschblock Test. A 2&nbsp;m wide block of snow is isolated from the rest of the slope and progressively loaded. The result is a rating of slope stability on a seven step scale.<ref name="Abromelt">{{cite web|url=http://www.fsavalanche.org/Default.aspx?ContentId=23&LinkId=28&ParentLinkId=3 |title=Learn how to: Perform A Rutschblock Test |first1=Doug|last1=Abromelt|first2=Greg|last2=Johnson|date=Winter 2011–2012 |publisher=USFS National Avalanche Center |access-date=28 November 2012 |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130901034917/http://fsavalanche.org/Default.aspx?ContentId=23&LinkId=28&ParentLinkId=3 |archive-date=1 September 2013}}</ref> (''Rutsch'' means slide in German.)
===Research Centres===
*[[Colorado Avalanche Information Center]]


== Avalanches and climate change ==
===Related Flows===
Avalanche formation and frequency is highly affected by weather patterns and the local climate. Snowpack layers will form differently depending on whether snow is falling in very cold or very warm conditions, and very dry or very humid conditions. Thus, climate change may affect when, where, and how often avalanches occur, and may also change the type of avalanches that are occurring.<ref name="Strapazzon-2021">{{Cite journal |last1=Strapazzon |first1=Giacomo |last2=Schweizer |first2=Jürg |last3=Chiambretti |first3=Igor |last4=Brodmann Maeder |first4=Monika |last5=Brugger |first5=Hermann |last6=Zafren |first6=Ken |date=12 April 2021 |title=Effects of Climate Change on Avalanche Accidents and Survival |journal=Frontiers in Physiology |volume=12 |pages=639433 |doi=10.3389/fphys.2021.639433 |issn=1664-042X |pmc=8072472 |pmid=33912070|doi-access=free}}</ref>
*[[Landslide]]
*[[Mudflow]]
*[[Pyroclastic flow]]
*[[Debris flow]]
*[[Slush flow]]
*[[Lahar]]
*[[Gravity current]]


=== Impacts on avalanche type and frequency ===
===Famous Avalanche Disasters===
Overall, a rising seasonal snow line and a decrease in the number of days with snow cover are predicted.<ref name="IPCC">{{Cite web |title=Chapter 2: High Mountain Areas – Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate |url=https://www.ipcc.ch/srocc/chapter/chapter-2/ |access-date=4 April 2022}}</ref><ref name="Lazar-2010">{{Cite journal |last1=Lazar |first1=Brian |last2=Williams |first2=Mark W. |date=2010 |title=Potential Changes in the Frequency of Rain-On-Snow Events for U.S. Cascades Ski Areas As A Result of Climate Change: Projections for Mt Bachelor, Oregon in the 21st Century |url=https://arc.lib.montana.edu/snow-science/objects/ISSW_P-024.pdf |journal=2010 International Snow Science Workshop |language=en |pages=444–449}}</ref> Climate change-caused temperature increases and changes in precipitation patterns will likely differ between the different mountain regions,<ref name="IPCC" /> and the impacts of these changes on avalanches will change at different elevations. In the long term, avalanche frequency at lower elevations is expected to decline corresponding to a decrease in snow cover and depth, and a short-term increase in the number of wet avalanches are predicted.<ref name="IPCC" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Naaim |first1=Mohamed |last2=Eckert |first2=Nicolas |date=2 October 2016 |title=Decrease of Snow Avalanches Activity and Proliferation of Wet Snow Avalanches in French Alps Under Climate Warming |url=https://arc.lib.montana.edu/snow-science/item/2461 |journal=International Snow Science Workshop 2016 Proceedings, Breckenridge, CO, USA |language=en |pages=1319–1322}}</ref><ref name="Zeidler-2016">{{Cite journal |last1=Zeidler |first1=Antonia |last2=Stoll |first2=Elena |date=2 October 2016 |title=What Do We Know About the Impact on the Snowpack in a Changing Climate – a Work in Progress |url=https://arc.lib.montana.edu/snow-science/item/2398 |journal=International Snow Science Workshop 2016 Proceedings, Breckenridge, CO, USA |language=en |pages=970–971}}</ref>
*[[Green Alder]]
*[[Galtur]]
*[[Montroc]]


Precipitation is expected to increase, meaning more snow or rain depending on the elevation. Higher elevations predicted to remain above the seasonal snow line will likely see an increase in avalanche activity due to the increases in precipitation during the winter season.<ref name="Zeidler-2016" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Salzer |first1=Friedrich |last2=Studeregger |first2=Arnold |date=2010 |title=Climate Change in Lower Austria – A Snow Cover Analysis of the Last 100 Years With a Special Emphasis on the Last Century and the Impact of the Avalanche Situation in Lower Austria |url=https://arc.lib.montana.edu/snow-science/item/400 |journal=2010 International Snow Science Workshop |language=en |pages=362–366}}</ref> Storm precipitation intensity is also expected to increase, which is likely to lead to more days with enough snowfall to cause the snowpack to become unstable. Moderate and high elevations may see an increase in volatile swings from one weather extreme to the other.<ref name="IPCC" /> Predictions also show an increase in the number of rain on snow events,<ref name="Lazar-2010" /> and wet avalanche cycles occurring earlier in the spring during the remainder of this century.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Lazar |first1=Brian |last2=Williams |first2=Mark |date=2006 |title=Climate Change in Western Ski Areas: Timing of Wet Avalanches in Aspen Ski Area in the Years 2030 and 2100 |url=https://arc.lib.montana.edu/snow-science/item/1035 |journal=Proceedings of the 2006 International Snow Science Workshop, Telluride, Colorado |language=en |pages=899–906}}</ref>
==References==
===Bibliography===
*''[[Mark the Mountain Guide: Avalanche!]]'': a children's book about an avalanche that includes definitions & explanations of the phenomenon.
* Daffern, Tony: ''Avalanche Safety for Skiers, Climbers and Snowboarders'', Rocky Mountain Books, 1999, ISBN 0-921102-72-0
* Billman, John. "Mike Elggren on Surviving an Avalanche". ''Skiing'' magazine Feb 2007: 26.
* McClung, David and Shaerer, Peter: ''The Avalanche Handbook'', The Mountaineers: 1993. ISBN 0-89886-364-3
* Tremper, Bruce: ''Staying Alive in Avalanche Terrain'', The Mountaineers: 2001. ISBN 0-89886-834-3
* Munter, Werner: ''Drei mal drei (3x3) Lawinen. Risikomanagement im Wintersport'', [[Bergverlag Rother]], 2002. ISBN 3-7633-2060-1 {{de icon}} (partial English translation included in ''PowderGuide: Managing Avalanche Risk'' ISBN 0-9724827-3-3)
* Shiva P. Pudasaini and Kolumban Hutter: ''Avalanche Dynamics: Dynamics of Rapid Flows of Dense Granular Avalanches'', Springer, Berlin, New York, 2007. ISBN 3-540-32686-3


=== Impacts on burial survival rate ===
===Notes===
The warm, wet snowpacks that are likely to increase in frequency due to climate change may also make avalanche burials more deadly. Warm snow has a higher moisture content and is therefore denser than colder snow. Denser avalanche debris decreases the ability for a buried person to breath and the amount of time they have before they run out of oxygen. This increases the likelihood of death by asphyxia in the event of a burial.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Strapazzon |first1=Giacomo |last2=Paal |first2=Peter |last3=Schweizer |first3=Jürg |last4=Falk |first4=Markus |last5=Reuter |first5=Benjamin |last6=Schenk |first6=Kai |last7=Gatterer |first7=Hannes |last8=Grasegger |first8=Katharina |last9=Dal Cappello |first9=Tomas |last10=Malacrida |first10=Sandro |last11=Riess |first11=Lukas |date=15 December 2017 |title=Effects of snow properties on humans breathing into an artificial air pocket – an experimental field study |journal=Scientific Reports |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=17675 |doi=10.1038/s41598-017-17960-4 |issn=2045-2322 |pmc=5732296 |pmid=29247235|bibcode=2017NatSR...717675S}}</ref> Additionally, the predicted thinner snowpacks may increase the frequency of injuries due to trauma, such as a buried skier striking a rock or tree.<ref name="Strapazzon-2021" />
{{Ref improve section|date=February 2008}}



== Avalanches of dust on Mars ==
{{Needs expansion|date=November 2023}}{{multipleimage|header=[[Planum Boreum#Avalanches|Avalanches]] on [[Mars]] |direction-horizontal | caption_align=center |align=center |width= |image1=Avalanche on North pole scarp on Mars.jpg |caption1=27 November 2011 |width1=300 |image2=PIA24035-Mars-Avalanche-20190529.jpg |caption2=29 May 2019 |width2=250 |footer=}}
{{clear}}

== See also ==
{{portal|mountains}}

=== Related flows ===
{{div col|colwidth=23em}}
* [[Debris flow]]
* [[Gravity current]]
* [[Lahar]]
* [[Landslide]]
* [[Mudflow]]
* [[Pyroclastic flow]]
* [[Rockslide]]
* [[Slush flow]]
{{div col end}}

=== Avalanche disasters ===
{{Main|List of avalanches by death toll}}
* [[1999 Galtür avalanche]]
* [[Montroc]]
* [[2012 Gayari Sector avalanche]]

== References ==

=== Bibliography ===
* McClung, David. ''Snow Avalanches as a Non-critical, Punctuated Equilibrium System'': Chapter 24 in Nonlinear Dynamics in Geosciences, A.A. Tsonsis and J.B. Elsner (Eds.), Springer, 2007 {{ISBN?}}
* Daffern, Tony: ''Avalanche Safety for Skiers, Climbers and Snowboarders'', Rocky Mountain Books, 1999, {{ISBN|0-921102-72-0}}
* Billman, John: ''Mike Elggren on Surviving an Avalanche''. ''[[Skiing (magazine)|Skiing]]'' magazine February 2007: 26.
* McClung, David and Shaerer, Peter: ''The Avalanche Handbook'', The Mountaineers: 2006. {{ISBN|978-0-89886-809-8}}
* Tremper, Bruce: ''Staying Alive in Avalanche Terrain'', The Mountaineers: 2001. {{ISBN|0-89886-834-3}}
* Munter, Werner: ''Drei mal drei (3x3) Lawinen. Risikomanagement im Wintersport'', [[Bergverlag Rother]], 2002. {{ISBN|3-7633-2060-1}} {{in lang|de}} (partial English translation included in ''PowderGuide: Managing Avalanche Risk'' {{ISBN|0-9724827-3-3}})
* Michael Falser: ''Historische Lawinenschutzlandschaften: eine Aufgabe für die Kulturlandschafts- und Denkmalpflege'' In: kunsttexte 3/2010, unter: [http://edoc.hu-berlin.de/kunsttexte/2010-3/falser-michael-1/PDF/falser.pdf Historische Lawinenschutzlandschaften: eine Aufgabe für die Kulturlandschafts- und Denkmalpflege]

=== Notes ===
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


==External links==
== External links ==
{{Commons-inline|Avalanche}}
{{Commons|Avalanche chute}}
{{Commons-inline|Avalanche chute}}
{{Sister project links|Avalanche}}
*[http://www.virtualmountains.ca The Avalanche Education Project]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100514164556/http://www.virtualmountains.ca/ The Avalanche Education Project]
*[http://www.edu4hazards.org/avalanche.html Surviving an Avalanche - A guide for children and youth]
* [http://www.edu4hazards.org/avalanche.html Surviving an Avalanche A guide for children and youth] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210426223016/http://www.edu4hazards.org/avalanche.html |date=26 April 2021 }}
*[http://nsidc.org/snow/avalanche/ Avalanche Awareness]
* [http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/006/AD075E/AD075e09.htm Avalanche Defense Photographs]
*[http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/006/AD075E/AD075e09.htm Avalanche Defense Photographs]
* [http://www.avalanche.ca/ Avalanche Canada]
*[http://www.avalanche.ca Canadian Avalanche Association]
* [http://www.avalancheassociation.ca/ Canadian Avalanche Association] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201021082553/https://www.avalancheassociation.ca/ |date=21 October 2020}}
* [http://avalanche.state.co.us/ Colorado Avalanche Information Center]
*[http://archives.cbc.ca/IDD-1-75-1483/science_technology/avalanches/ CBC Digital Archives – Avalanche!]
* [http://www.snowstudies.org/ Center for Snow and Avalanche Studies]
*[http://avalanche.state.co.us/ Colorado Avalanche Information Center]
*[http://www.snowstudies.org/ Center for Snow and Avalanche Studies]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20170801122210/http://www.avalanches.org/eaws/en/main.php EAWS European Avalanche Warning Services]
*[http://www.slf.ch/laworg/map.html Directory of European avalanche services]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20050306024837/http://www.slf.ch/laworg/map.html Directory of European avalanche services]
* {{NYTtopic|subjects/a/avalanches|Avalanches}}
*[http://www.slf.ch/welcome-en.html Swiss Federal Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060423190948/http://www.slf.ch/welcome-en.html Swiss Federal Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research]
*[http://www.sais.gov.uk/ sportscotland Avalanche Information Service]
* [http://www.sais.gov.uk/ Scottish Avalanche Information Service]
*{{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Avalanche}} But note the myths cited above.
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Avalanche}} But note the myths cited above
* [http://utahavalanchecenter.org/ Utah Avalanche Center]
* [http://www.avalanche.net.nz/ New Zealand Avalanche Advisory]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20130407180312/http://www.gulmargavalanche.org/ Gulmarg Avalanche Center]
* [http://www.avalanche.org/ US Avalanche.org]
* [http://www.sierraavalanchecenter.org/ Sierra Avalanche Center (Tahoe National Forest)]


{{Natural disasters}}
{{Natural disasters}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Geological hazards]]
[[Category:Weather hazards]]
[[Category:Snow]]
[[Category:Avalanches| ]]
[[Category:Avalanches| ]]
[[Category:French loanwords]]
[[Category:Accidents]]
[[Category:Hazard scales|Avalanche #Classification]]

[[Category:Hazards of outdoor recreation]]
[[ar:انهيار جليدي]]
[[Category:Mountaineering disasters]]
[[an:Lurte]]
[[Category:Natural disasters]]
[[ast:Ádene]]
[[Category:Weather hazards]]
[[be:Лавіна]]
[[be-x-old:Лявіна]]
[[bs:Lavina]]
[[bg:Лавина]]
[[ca:Allau]]
[[cs:Lavina]]
[[cy:Eirlithriad]]
[[da:Lavine]]
[[de:Lawine]]
[[et:Laviin]]
[[el:Χιονοστιβάδα]]
[[es:Alud]]
[[eo:Lavango]]
[[eu:Elur-jausi]]
[[fa:بهمن (برف)]]
[[hif:Avalanche]]
[[fr:Avalanche]]
[[ga:Maidhm shléibhe]]
[[gd:Maoim-sneachda]]
[[gl:Avalancha]]
[[ko:눈사태]]
[[hi:हिमप्रपात]]
[[hr:Snježna lavina]]
[[id:Longsor salju]]
[[ia:Avalanche]]
[[is:Snjóflóð]]
[[it:Valanga]]
[[he:מפולת שלגים]]
[[krc:Кюрт]]
[[ka:ზვავი]]
[[sw:Banguko]]
[[la:Labina nivis]]
[[lv:Lavīna]]
[[lt:Lavina]]
[[hu:Lavina]]
[[mk:Лавина]]
[[ml:ഹിമാനീപതനം]]
[[mwl:Abalanxa]]
[[nl:Lawine]]
[[ja:雪崩]]
[[no:Lavine]]
[[nn:Ras]]
[[oc:Avalanca]]
[[pnb:برف دا ہڑ]]
[[ps:يمال]]
[[pl:Lawina]]
[[pt:Avalancha]]
[[ro:Avalanșă]]
[[rue:Лавина]]
[[ru:Лавина]]
[[sa:हिमप्रपात]]
[[scn:Lavanca (frana di nivi)]]
[[simple:Avalanche]]
[[sk:Lavína]]
[[sl:Plaz]]
[[sr:Снежна лавина]]
[[sh:Lavina]]
[[fi:Lumivyöry]]
[[sv:Lavin]]
[[tl:Pagguho]]
[[ta:பனிச்சரிவு]]
[[te:హిమ సంపాతం]]
[[th:หิมะถล่ม]]
[[tr:Çığ]]
[[uk:Лавина]]
[[vi:Tuyết lở]]
[[fiu-vro:Laviin]]
[[war:Pagkatimpág]]
[[diq:Hewrês]]
[[bat-smg:Snėiga lavėna]]
[[zh:雪崩]]

Latest revision as of 16:03, 6 December 2024

A powder snow avalanche in the Himalayas near Mount Everest.
Heavy equipment in action after an avalanche has interrupted service on the Saint-Gervais–Vallorcine railway in Haute-Savoie, France (2006).
The terminus of an avalanche in Alaska's Kenai Fjords.
Alaska Railroad track blocked by a snow slide

An avalanche is a rapid flow of snow down a slope, such as a hill or mountain.[1] Avalanches can be triggered spontaneously, by factors such as increased precipitation or snowpack weakening, or by external means such as humans, other animals, and earthquakes. Primarily composed of flowing snow and air, large avalanches have the capability to capture and move ice, rocks, and trees.

Avalanches occur in two general forms, or combinations thereof:[2] slab avalanches made of tightly packed snow, triggered by a collapse of an underlying weak snow layer, and loose snow avalanches made of looser snow. After being set off, avalanches usually accelerate rapidly and grow in mass and volume as they capture more snow. If an avalanche moves fast enough, some of the snow may mix with the air, forming a powder snow avalanche.

Though they appear to share similarities, avalanches are distinct from slush flows, mudslides, rock slides, and serac collapses. They are also different from large scale movements of ice. Avalanches can happen in any mountain range that has an enduring snowpack. They are most frequent in winter or spring, but may occur at any time of the year. In mountainous areas, avalanches are among the most serious natural hazards to life and property, so great efforts are made in avalanche control. There are many classification systems for the different forms of avalanches. Avalanches can be described by their size, destructive potential, initiation mechanism, composition, and dynamics.

Formation

[edit]
Loose snow avalanches (far left) and slab avalanches (near center) near Mount Shuksan in the North Cascades mountains. Fracture propagation is relatively limited.
15 cm deep, soft slab avalanche triggered by a snowboarder near Heliotrope Ridge, Mount Baker in March 2010. Multiple crown fracture lines are visible in the top-middle of the image. Note the granular characteristic of the debris in the foreground that results from the slab breaking up during descent.

Most avalanches occur spontaneously during storms under increased load due to snowfall and/or erosion. Metamorphic changes in the snowpack, such as melting due to solar radiation, is the second-largest cause of natural avalanches. Other natural causes include rain, earthquakes, rockfall, and icefall. Artificial triggers of avalanches include skiers, snowmobiles, and controlled explosive work. Contrary to popular belief, avalanches are not triggered by loud sound; the pressure from sound is orders of magnitude too small to trigger an avalanche.[3]

Avalanche initiation can start at a point with only a small amount of snow moving initially; this is typical of wet snow avalanches or avalanches in dry unconsolidated snow. However, if the snow has sintered into a stiff slab overlying a weak layer, then fractures can propagate very rapidly, so that a large volume of snow, possibly thousands of cubic metres, can start moving almost simultaneously.[citation needed]

A snowpack will fail when the load exceeds the strength. The load is straightforward; it is the weight of the snow. However, the strength of the snowpack is much more difficult to determine and is extremely heterogeneous. It varies in detail with properties of the snow grains, size, density, morphology, temperature, water content; and the properties of the bonds between the grains.[4] These properties may all metamorphose in time according to the local humidity, water vapour flux, temperature and heat flux. The top of the snowpack is also extensively influenced by incoming radiation and the local air flow. One of the aims of avalanche research is to develop and validate computer models that can describe the evolution of the seasonal snowpack over time.[5] A complicating factor is the complex interaction of terrain and weather, which causes significant spatial and temporal variability of the depths, crystal forms, and layering of the seasonal snowpack.[6]

Slab avalanches

[edit]

Slab avalanches are formed frequently in snow that has been deposited, or redeposited by wind. They have the characteristic appearance of a block (slab) of snow cut out from its surroundings by fractures. Elements of slab avalanches include a crown fracture at the top of the start zone, flank fractures on the sides of the start zones, and a fracture at the bottom called the stauchwall. The crown and flank fractures are vertical walls in the snow delineating the snow that was entrained in the avalanche from the snow that remained on the slope. Slabs can vary in thickness from a few centimetres to three metres. Slab avalanches account for around 90% of avalanche-related fatalities.[citation needed]

Powder snow avalanches

[edit]

The largest avalanches form turbulent suspension currents known as powder snow avalanches or mixed avalanches,[7] a kind of gravity current. These consist of a powder cloud, which overlies a dense avalanche. They can form from any type of snow or initiation mechanism, but usually occur with fresh dry powder. They can exceed speeds of 300 km/h (190 mph), and masses of 1,000,000 tons; their flows can travel long distances along flat valley bottoms and even uphill for short distances.[8]

Wet snow avalanches

[edit]
Avalanche on Simplon Pass (2019)

In contrast to powder snow avalanches, wet snow avalanches are a low velocity suspension of snow and water, with the flow confined to the track surface (McClung, 1999, p. 108).[4] The low speed of travel is due to the friction between the sliding surface of the track and the water saturated flow. Despite the low speed of travel (≈10–40 km/h), wet snow avalanches are capable of generating powerful destructive forces, due to the large mass and density. The body of the flow of a wet snow avalanche can plough through soft snow, and can scour boulders, earth, trees, and other vegetation; leaving exposed and often scored ground in the avalanche track. Wet snow avalanches can be initiated from either loose snow releases, or slab releases, and only occur in snowpacks that are water saturated and isothermally equilibrated to the melting point of water. The isothermal characteristic of wet snow avalanches has led to the secondary term of isothermal slides found in the literature (for example in Daffern, 1999, p. 93).[9] At temperate latitudes wet snow avalanches are frequently associated with climatic avalanche cycles at the end of the winter season, when there is significant daytime warming.[citation needed]

Ice avalanche

[edit]

An ice avalanche occurs when a large piece of ice, such as from a serac or calving glacier, falls onto ice (such as the Khumbu Icefall), triggering a movement of broken ice chunks. The resulting movement is more analogous to a rockfall or a landslide than a snow avalanche.[4] They are typically very difficult to predict and almost impossible to mitigate.[citation needed]

Avalanche pathway

[edit]

As an avalanche moves down a slope it follows a certain pathway that is dependent on the slope's degree of steepness and the volume of snow/ice involved in the mass movement. The origin of an avalanche is called the Starting Point and typically occurs on a 30–45 degree slope. The body of the pathway is called the Track of the avalanche and usually occurs on a 20–30 degree slope. When the avalanche loses its momentum and eventually stops it reaches the Runout Zone. This usually occurs when the slope has reached a steepness that is less than 20 degrees.[10] These degrees are not consistently true due to the fact that each avalanche is unique depending on the stability of the snowpack that it was derived from as well as the environmental or human influences that triggered the mass movement.[citation needed]

Injuries and deaths

[edit]

People caught in avalanches can die from suffocation, trauma, or hypothermia. From "1950–1951 to 2020–2021"[11] there were 1,169 people who died in avalanches in the United States.[11] For the 11-year period ending April 2006, 445 people died in avalanches throughout North America.[12] On average, 28 people die in avalanches every winter in the United States.[13] In 2001 it was reported that globally an average of 150 people die each year from avalanches.[14] From 2014-2024, the majority of those killed in avalanches in the United States were skiing (91) followed by snowmobiling (71), snowshoeing/climbing/hiking (38), and snowboarding (20).[15] Three of the deadliest recorded avalanches have killed over a thousand people each.

Terrain, snowpack, weather

[edit]
In steep avalanche-prone terrain, traveling on ridges is generally safer than traversing the slopes.
A cornice of snow about to fall. Cracks in the snow are visible in area (1). Area (3) fell soon after this picture was taken, leaving area (2) as the new edge.

Doug Fesler and Jill Fredston developed a conceptual model of the three primary elements of avalanches: terrain, weather, and snowpack. Terrain describes the places where avalanches occur, weather describes the meteorological conditions that create the snowpack, and snowpack describes the structural characteristics of snow that make avalanche formation possible.[4][16]

Terrain

[edit]

Avalanche formation requires a slope shallow enough for snow to accumulate but steep enough for the snow to accelerate once set in motion by the combination of mechanical failure (of the snowpack) and gravity. The angle of the slope that can hold snow, called the angle of repose, depends on a variety of factors, such as crystal form and moisture content. Some forms of drier and colder snow will only stick to shallower slopes, while wet and warm snow can bond to very steep surfaces. In coastal mountains, such as the Cordillera del Paine region of Patagonia, deep snowpacks collect on vertical and even overhanging rock faces. The slope angle that can allow moving snow to accelerate depends on a variety of factors such as the snow's shear strength (which is itself dependent upon crystal form) and the configuration of layers and inter-layer interfaces.[citation needed]

The snowpack on slopes with sunny exposures is strongly influenced by sunshine. Diurnal cycles of thawing and refreezing can stabilize the snowpack by promoting settlement. Strong freeze-thaw cycles result in the formation of surface crusts during the night and of unstable surface snow during the day. Slopes in the lee of a ridge or of another wind obstacle accumulate more snow and are more likely to include pockets of deep snow, wind slabs, and cornices, all of which, when disturbed, may result in avalanche formation. Conversely, the snowpack on a windward slope is often much shallower than on a lee slope.[17]

Avalanche path with 800 metres (2,600 ft) vertical fall in the Glacier Peak Wilderness, Washington state. Avalanche paths in alpine terrain may be poorly defined because of limited vegetation. Below tree line, avalanche paths are often delineated by vegetative trim lines created by past avalanches. The start zone is visible near the top of the image, the track is in the middle of the image and clearly denoted by vegetative trimlines, and the runout zone is shown at the bottom of the image. One possible timeline is as follows: an avalanche forms in the start zone near the ridge, and then descends the track, until coming to rest in the runout zone.

Avalanches and avalanche paths share common elements: a start zone where the avalanche originates, a track along which the avalanche flows, and a runout zone where the avalanche comes to rest. The debris deposit is the accumulated mass of the avalanched snow once it has come to rest in the run-out zone. For the image at left, many small avalanches form in this avalanche path every year, but most of these avalanches do not run the full vertical or horizontal length of the path. The frequency with which avalanches form in a given area is known as the return period.[18]

The start zone of an avalanche must be steep enough to allow snow to accelerate once set in motion, additionally convex slopes are less stable than concave slopes because of the disparity between the tensile strength of snow layers and their compressive strength. The composition and structure of the ground surface beneath the snowpack influences the stability of the snowpack, either being a source of strength or weakness. Avalanches are unlikely to form in very thick forests, but boulders and sparsely distributed vegetation can create weak areas deep within the snowpack through the formation of strong temperature gradients. Full-depth avalanches (avalanches that sweep a slope virtually clean of snow cover) are more common on slopes with smooth ground, such as grass or rock slabs.[19]

Generally speaking, avalanches follow drainages down-slope, frequently sharing drainage features with summertime watersheds. At and below tree line, avalanche paths through drainages are well defined by vegetation boundaries called trim lines, which occur where avalanches have removed trees and prevented regrowth of large vegetation. Engineered drainages, such as the avalanche dam on Mount Stephen in Kicking Horse Pass, have been constructed to protect people and property by redirecting the flow of avalanches. Deep debris deposits from avalanches will collect in catchments at the terminus of a run out, such as gullies and river beds.

Slopes flatter than 25 degrees or steeper than 60 degrees typically have a lower incidence of avalanches. Human-triggered avalanches have the greatest incidence when the snow's angle of repose is between 35 and 45 degrees; the critical angle,[6] the angle at which human-triggered avalanches are most frequent, is 38 degrees. When the incidence of human triggered avalanches is normalized by the rates of recreational use, however, hazard increases uniformly with slope angle, and no significant difference in hazard for a given exposure direction can be found.[20] The rule of thumb is: A slope that is flat enough to hold snow but steep enough to ski has the potential to generate an avalanche, regardless of the angle.[citation needed]

Snowpack structure and characteristics

[edit]
After surface hoarfrost becomes buried by later snowfall, the buried hoar layer can be a weak layer upon which upper layers can slide.

The snowpack is composed of ground-parallel layers that accumulate over the winter. Each layer contains ice grains that are representative of the distinct meteorological conditions during which the snow formed and was deposited. Once deposited, a snow layer continues to evolve under the influence of the meteorological conditions that prevail after deposition.[citation needed]

For an avalanche to occur, it is necessary that a snowpack have a weak layer (or instability) below a slab of cohesive snow. In practice the formal mechanical and structural factors related to snowpack instability are not directly observable outside of laboratories, thus the more easily observed properties of the snow layers (e.g. penetration resistance, grain size, grain type, temperature) are used as index measurements of the mechanical properties of the snow (e.g. tensile strength, friction coefficients, shear strength, and ductile strength). This results in two principal sources of uncertainty in determining snowpack stability based on snow structure: First, both the factors influencing snow stability and the specific characteristics of the snowpack vary widely within small areas and time scales, resulting in significant difficulty extrapolating point observations of snow layers across different scales of space and time. Second, the relationship between readily observable snowpack characteristics and the snowpack's critical mechanical properties has not been completely developed.[citation needed]

While the deterministic relationship between snowpack characteristics and snowpack stability is still a matter of ongoing scientific study, there is a growing empirical understanding of the snow composition and deposition characteristics that influence the likelihood of an avalanche. Observation and experience has shown that newly fallen snow requires time to bond with the snow layers beneath it, especially if the new snow falls during very cold and dry conditions. If ambient air temperatures are cold enough, shallow snow above or around boulders, plants, and other discontinuities in the slope, weakens from rapid crystal growth that occurs in the presence of a critical temperature gradient. Large, angular snow crystals are indicators of weak snow, because such crystals have fewer bonds per unit volume than small, rounded crystals that pack tightly together. Consolidated snow is less likely to slough than loose powdery layers or wet isothermal snow; however, consolidated snow is a necessary condition for the occurrence of slab avalanches, and persistent instabilities within the snowpack can hide below well-consolidated surface layers. Uncertainty associated with the empirical understanding of the factors influencing snow stability leads most professional avalanche workers to recommend conservative use of avalanche terrain relative to current snowpack instability.[citation needed]

Weather

[edit]
After digging a snow pit, it is possible to evaluate the snowpack for unstable layers. In this picture, snow from a weak layer has been easily scraped away by hand, leaving a horizontal line in the wall of the pit.

Avalanches only occur in a standing snowpack. Typically winter seasons at high latitudes, high altitudes, or both have weather that is sufficiently unsettled and cold enough for precipitated snow to accumulate into a seasonal snowpack. Continentality, through its potentiating influence on the meteorological extremes experienced by snowpacks, is an important factor in the evolution of instabilities, and consequential occurrence of avalanches faster stabilization of the snowpack after storm cycles.[21] The evolution of the snowpack is critically sensitive to small variations within the narrow range of meteorological conditions that allow for the accumulation of snow into a snowpack. Among the critical factors controlling snowpack evolution are: heating by the sun, radiational cooling, vertical temperature gradients in standing snow, snowfall amounts, and snow types. Generally, mild winter weather will promote the settlement and stabilization of the snowpack; conversely, very cold, windy, or hot weather will weaken the snowpack.[22]

At temperatures close to the freezing point of water, or during times of moderate solar radiation, a gentle freeze-thaw cycle will take place. The melting and refreezing of water in the snow strengthens the snowpack during the freezing phase and weakens it during the thawing phase. A rapid rise in temperature, to a point significantly above the freezing point of water, may cause avalanche formation at any time of year.[23]

Persistent cold temperatures can either prevent new snow from stabilizing or destabilize the existing snowpack. Cold air temperatures on the snow surface produce a temperature gradient in the snow, because the ground temperature at the base of the snowpack is usually around 0 °C, and the ambient air temperature can be much colder. When a temperature gradient greater than 10 °C change per vertical meter of snow is sustained for more than a day, angular crystals called depth hoar or facets begin forming in the snowpack because of rapid moisture transport along the temperature gradient. These angular crystals, which bond poorly to one another and the surrounding snow, often become a persistent weakness in the snowpack. When a slab lying on top of a persistent weakness is loaded by a force greater than the strength of the slab and persistent weak layer, the persistent weak layer can fail and generate an avalanche.[citation needed]

Any wind stronger than a light breeze can contribute to a rapid accumulation of snow on sheltered slopes downwind. Wind slabs form quickly and, if present, weaker snow below the slab may not have time to adjust to the new load. Even on a clear day, wind can quickly load a slope with snow by blowing snow from one place to another. Top-loading occurs when wind deposits snow from the top of a slope; cross-loading occurs when wind deposits snow parallel to the slope. When a wind blows over the top of a mountain, the leeward, or downwind, side of the mountain experiences top-loading, from the top to the bottom of that lee slope. When the wind blows across a ridge that leads up the mountain, the leeward side of the ridge is subject to cross-loading. Cross-loaded wind-slabs are usually difficult to identify visually.[citation needed]

Snowstorms and rainstorms are important contributors to avalanche danger. Heavy snowfall will cause instability in the existing snowpack, both because of the additional weight and because the new snow has insufficient time to bond to underlying snow layers. Rain has a similar effect. In the short term, rain causes instability because, like a heavy snowfall, it imposes an additional load on the snowpack and once rainwater seeps down through the snow, acts as a lubricant, reducing the natural friction between snow layers that holds the snowpack together. Most avalanches happen during or soon after a storm.[citation needed]

Daytime exposure to sunlight will rapidly destabilize the upper layers of the snowpack if the sunlight is strong enough to melt the snow, thereby reducing its hardness. During clear nights, the snowpack can re-freeze when ambient air temperatures fall below freezing, through the process of long-wave radiative cooling, or both. Radiative heat loss occurs when the night air is significantly cooler than the snowpack, and the heat stored in the snow is re-radiated into the atmosphere.[24]

Dynamics

[edit]

When a slab avalanche forms, the slab disintegrates into increasingly smaller fragments as the snow travels downhill. If the fragments become small enough the outer layer of the avalanche, called a saltation layer, takes on the characteristics of a fluid. When sufficiently fine particles are present they can become airborne and, given a sufficient quantity of airborne snow, this portion of the avalanche can become separated from the bulk of the avalanche and travel a greater distance as a powder snow avalanche.[25] Scientific studies using radar, following the 1999 Galtür avalanche disaster, confirmed the hypothesis that a saltation layer forms between the surface and the airborne components of an avalanche, which can also separate from the bulk of the avalanche.[26]

Driving an avalanche is the component of the avalanche's weight parallel to the slope; as the avalanche progresses any unstable snow in its path will tend to become incorporated, so increasing the overall weight. This force will increase as the steepness of the slope increases, and diminish as the slope flattens. Resisting this are a number of components that are thought to interact with each other: the friction between the avalanche and the surface beneath; friction between the air and snow within the fluid; fluid-dynamic drag at the leading edge of the avalanche; shear resistance between the avalanche and the air through which it is passing, and shear resistance between the fragments within the avalanche itself. An avalanche will continue to accelerate until the resistance exceeds the forward force.[27]

Modeling

[edit]

Attempts to model avalanche behaviour date from the early 20th century, notably the work of Professor Lagotala in preparation for the 1924 Winter Olympics in Chamonix.[28] His method was developed by A. Voellmy and popularised following the publication in 1955 of his Ueber die Zerstoerungskraft von Lawinen (On the Destructive Force of Avalanches).[29]

Voellmy used a simple empirical formula, treating an avalanche as a sliding block of snow moving with a drag force that was proportional to the square of the speed of its flow:[30]

He and others subsequently derived other formulae that take other factors into account, with the Voellmy-Salm-Gubler and the Perla-Cheng-McClung models becoming most widely used as simple tools to model flowing (as opposed to powder snow) avalanches.[28]

Since the 1990s many more sophisticated models have been developed. In Europe much of the recent work was carried out as part of the SATSIE (Avalanche Studies and Model Validation in Europe) research project supported by the European Commission[31] which produced the leading-edge MN2L model, now in use with the Service Restauration des Terrains en Montagne (Mountain Rescue Service) in France, and D2FRAM (Dynamical Two-Flow-Regime Avalanche Model), which was still undergoing validation as of 2007.[25] Other known models are the SAMOS-AT avalanche simulation software[32] and the RAMMS software.[33]

Human involvement

[edit]
United States Forest Service avalanche danger advisories.
Snow fences in Switzerland during summer.
Avalanche blasting in French ski resort Tignes (3,600 m)
Avalanche warning sign near Banff, Alberta

How to prevent avalanches

[edit]

Preventative measures are employed in areas where avalanches pose a significant threat to people, such as ski resorts, mountain towns, roads, and railways. There are several ways to prevent avalanches and lessen their power and develop preventative measures to reduce the likelihood and size of avalanches by disrupting the structure of the snowpack, while passive measures reinforce and stabilize the snowpack in situ. The simplest active measure is repeatedly traveling on a snowpack as snow accumulates; this can be by means of boot-packing, ski-cutting, or machine grooming. Explosives are used extensively to prevent avalanches, by triggering smaller avalanches that break down instabilities in the snowpack, and removing overburden that can result in larger avalanches. Explosive charges are delivered by a number of methods including hand-tossed charges, helicopter-dropped bombs, Gazex concussion lines, and ballistic projectiles launched by air cannons and artillery. Passive preventive systems such as snow fences and light walls can be used to direct the placement of snow. Snow builds up around the fence, especially the side that faces the prevailing winds. Downwind of the fence, snow build-up is lessened. This is caused by the loss of snow at the fence that would have been deposited and the pickup of the snow that is already there by the wind, which was depleted of snow at the fence. When there is a sufficient density of trees, they can greatly reduce the strength of avalanches. They hold snow in place and when there is an avalanche, the impact of the snow against the trees slows it down. Trees can either be planted or they can be conserved, such as in the building of a ski resort, to reduce the strength of avalanches.[34]

In turn, socio-environmental changes can influence the occurrence of damaging avalanches: some studies linking changes in land-use/land-cover patterns and the evolution of snow avalanche damage in mid latitude mountains show the importance of the role played by vegetation cover, that is at the root of the increase of damage when the protective forest is deforested (because of demographic growth, intensive grazing and industrial or legal causes), and at the root of the decrease of damage because of the transformation of a traditional land-management system based on overexploitation into a system based on land marginalization and reforestation, something that has happened mainly since the mid-20th century in mountain environments of developed countries.[35]

Mitigation

[edit]

In many areas, regular avalanche tracks can be identified and precautions can be taken to minimize damage, such as the prevention of development in these areas. To mitigate the effect of avalanches the construction of artificial barriers can be very effective in reducing avalanche damage. There are several types: One kind of barrier (snow net) uses a net strung between poles that are anchored by guy wires in addition to their foundations. These barriers are similar to those used for rockslides. Another type of barrier is a rigid fence-like structure (snow fence) and may be constructed of steel, wood or pre-stressed concrete. They usually have gaps between the beams and are built perpendicular to the slope, with reinforcing beams on the downhill side. Rigid barriers are often considered unsightly, especially when many rows must be built. They are also expensive and vulnerable to damage from falling rocks in the warmer months. In addition to industrially manufactured barriers, landscaped barriers, called avalanche dams stop or deflect avalanches with their weight and strength. These barriers are made out of concrete, rocks, or earth. They are usually placed right above the structure, road, or railway that they are trying to protect, although they can also be used to channel avalanches into other barriers. Occasionally, earth mounds are placed in the avalanche's path to slow it down. Finally, along transportation corridors, large shelters, called snow sheds, can be built directly in the slide path of an avalanche to protect traffic from avalanches.[36]

Early warning systems

[edit]

Warning systems can detect avalanches which develop slowly, such as ice avalanches caused by icefalls from glaciers. Interferometric radars, high-resolution cameras, or motion sensors can monitor instable areas over a long term, lasting from days to years. Experts interpret the recorded data and are able to recognize upcoming ruptures in order to initiate appropriate measures. Such systems (e.g. the monitoring of the Weissmies glacier in Switzerland[37]) can recognize events several days in advance.

Alarm systems

[edit]
Radar station for avalanche monitoring in Zermatt.[38]

Modern radar technology enables the monitoring of large areas and the localization of avalanches at any weather condition, by day and by night. Complex alarm systems are able to detect avalanches within a short time in order to close (e.g. roads and rails) or evacuate (e.g. construction sites) endangered areas. An example of such a system is installed on the only access road of Zermatt in Switzerland.[38] Two radars monitor the slope of a mountain above the road. The system automatically closes the road by activating several barriers and traffic lights within seconds such that no people are harmed.[citation needed]

Survival, rescue, and recovery

[edit]

Avalanche accidents are broadly differentiated into 2 categories: accidents in recreational settings, and accidents in residential, industrial, and transportation settings. This distinction is motivated by the observed difference in the causes of avalanche accidents in the two settings. In the recreational setting most accidents are caused by the people involved in the avalanche. In a 1996 study, Jamieson et al. (pages 7–20)[39] found that 83% of all avalanches in the recreational setting were caused by those who were involved in the accident. In contrast, all the accidents in the residential, industrial, and transportation settings were due to spontaneous natural avalanches. Because of the difference in the causes of avalanche accidents, and the activities pursued in the two settings, avalanche and disaster management professionals have developed two related preparedness, rescue, and recovery strategies for each of the settings.[citation needed]

Notable avalanches

[edit]

Two avalanches occurred in March 1910 in the Cascade and Selkirk Mountain ranges; on 1 March the Wellington avalanche killed 96 in Washington state, United States. Three days later 62 railroad workers were killed in the Rogers Pass avalanche in British Columbia, Canada.[40]

During World War I, an estimated 40,000 to 80,000 soldiers died as a result of avalanches during the mountain campaign in the Alps at the Austrian-Italian front, many of which were caused by artillery fire.[41][42] Some 10,000 men, from both sides, died in avalanches in December 1916.[43]

In the northern hemisphere winter of 1950–1951 approximately 649 avalanches were recorded in a three-month period throughout the Alps in Austria, France, Switzerland, Italy and Germany. This series of avalanches killed around 265 people and was termed the Winter of Terror.[44]

A mountain climbing camp on Lenin Peak, in what is now Kyrgyzstan, was wiped out in 1990 when an earthquake triggered a large avalanche that overran the camp.[45] Forty-three climbers were killed.[46]

In 1993, the Bayburt Üzengili avalanche killed 60 individuals in Üzengili in the province of Bayburt, Turkey.[44]

A large avalanche in Montroc, France, in 1999, 300,000 cubic metres of snow slid on a 30° slope, achieving a speed in the region of 100 km/h (62 mph). It killed 12 people in their chalets under 100,000 tons of snow, 5 meters (16 feet) deep. The mayor of Chamonix was convicted of second-degree murder for not evacuating the area, but received a suspended sentence.[47]

The small Austrian village of Galtür was hit by the Galtür avalanche in 1999. The village was thought to be in a safe zone but the avalanche was exceptionally large and flowed into the village. Thirty-one people died.[citation needed]

On 1 December 2000, the Glory Bowl Avalanche formed on Mt. Glory which is located within the Teton Mountain Range in Wyoming, United States. Joel Roof was snowboarding recreationally in this backcountry, bowl-shaped run and triggered the avalanche. He was carried nearly 2,000 feet to the base of the mountain and was not successfully rescued.[48]

On 28 January 2003, the Tatra Mountains avalanche swept away nine out of a thirteen-member group heading to the summit of Rysy in the Tatra Mountains. The participants of the trip were students from the I Leon Kruczkowski High School in Tychy and individuals associated with the school's sports club.

On 3 July 2022 a serac collapsed on the Marmolada Glacier, Italy, causing an avalanche that killed 11 alpinists and injured eight.[49]

Classification of avalanches

[edit]

European avalanche risk

[edit]

In Europe, the avalanche risk is widely rated on the following scale, which was adopted in April 1993 to replace the earlier non-standard national schemes. Descriptions were last updated in May 2003 to enhance uniformity.[50]

In France, most avalanche deaths occur at risk levels 3 and 4. In Switzerland most occur at levels 2 and 3. It is thought that this may be due to national differences of interpretation when assessing the risks.[51]

Risk Level Snow Stability Icon Avalanche Risk
1 – Low Snow is generally very stable. Avalanches are unlikely except when heavy loads are applied on a few extreme steep slopes. Any spontaneous avalanches will be minor sloughs. In general, safe conditions.
2 – Moderate On some steep slopes the snow is only moderately stable. Elsewhere it is very stable. Avalanches may be triggered when heavy loads are applied, especially on a few generally identified steep slopes. Large spontaneous avalanches are not expected.
3 – Considerable On many steep slopes the snow is only moderately or weakly stable. Avalanches may be triggered on many slopes even if only light loads are applied. On some slopes, medium or even fairly large spontaneous avalanches may occur.
4 – High On most steep slopes the snow is not very stable. Avalanches are likely to be triggered on many slopes even if only light loads are applied. In some places, many medium or sometimes large spontaneous avalanches are likely.
5 – Very High The snow is generally unstable. Even on gentle slopes, many large spontaneous avalanches are likely to occur.

[1] Stability:

  • Generally described in more detail in the avalanche bulletin (regarding the altitude, aspect, type of terrain etc.)

[2] additional load:

  • heavy: two or more skiers or boarders without spacing between them, a single hiker or climber, a grooming machine, avalanche blasting
  • light: a single skier or snowboarder smoothly linking turns and without falling, a group of skiers or snowboarders with a minimum 10 m gap between each person, a single person on snowshoes

Gradient:

  • gentle slopes: with an incline below about 30°
  • steep slopes: with an incline over 30°
  • very steep slopes: with an incline over 35°
  • extremely steep slopes: extreme in terms of the incline (over 40°), the terrain profile, proximity of the ridge, smoothness of underlying ground

European avalanche size table

[edit]

Avalanche size: [citation needed]

Size Runout Potential Damage Physical Size
1 – Sluff Small snow slide that cannot bury a person, though there is a danger of falling. Unlikely, but possible risk of injury or death to people. length <50 m
volume <100 m3
2 – Small Stops within the slope. Could bury, injure or kill a person. length <100 m
volume <1,000 m3
3 – Medium Runs to the bottom of the slope. Could bury and destroy a car, damage a truck, destroy small buildings or break trees. length <1,000 m
volume <10,000 m3
4 – Large Runs over flat areas (significantly less than 30°) of at least 50 m in length, may reach the valley bottom. Could bury and destroy large trucks and trains, large buildings and forested areas. length >1,000 m
volume >10,000 m3

North American Avalanche Danger Scale

[edit]

In the United States and Canada, the following avalanche danger scale is used. Descriptors vary depending on country.

Danger Scale – English

Avalanche problems

[edit]

There are nine different types of avalanche problems:[52][53]

  • Storm slab
  • Wind slab
  • Wet slab avalanches
  • Persistent slab
  • Deep persistent slab
  • Loose dry avalanches
  • Loose wet avalanches
  • Glide avalanches
  • Cornice fall[citation needed]

Canadian classification for avalanche size

[edit]

The Canadian classification for avalanche size is based upon the consequences of the avalanche. Half sizes are commonly used.[54]

Size Destructive Potential
1 Relatively harmless to people.
2 Could bury, injure or kill a person.
3 Could bury and destroy a car, damage a truck, destroy a small building or break a few trees.
4 Could destroy a railway car, large truck, several buildings or a forest area up to 4 hectares.
5 Largest snow avalanche known. Could destroy a village or a forest of 40 hectares.

United States classification for avalanche size

[edit]

The size of avalanches are classified using two scales; size relative to destructive force or D-scale and size relative to the avalanche path or R-scale.[55][56] Both size scales range from 1 to 5 with the D size scale half sizes can be used.[55][56]

Size Relative to Path
R1~Very small, relative to the path.
R2~Small, relative to the path
R3~Medium, relative to the path
R4~Large, relative to the path
R5~Major or maximum, relative to the path
Size – Destructive Force
code mass length
D1 Relatively harmless to people <10 t 10 m
D2 Could bury, injure, or kill a person 102 t 100 m
D3 Could bury and destroy a car, damage a truck, destroy a wood-frame house, or break a few trees 103 t 1000 m
D4 Could destroy a railway car, large truck, several buildings, or substantial amount of forest 104 t 2000 m
D5 Could gouge the landscape. Largest snow avalanche known 105 t 3000 m

Rutschblock Test

[edit]

Slab avalanche hazard analysis can be done using the Rutschblock Test. A 2 m wide block of snow is isolated from the rest of the slope and progressively loaded. The result is a rating of slope stability on a seven step scale.[57] (Rutsch means slide in German.)

Avalanches and climate change

[edit]

Avalanche formation and frequency is highly affected by weather patterns and the local climate. Snowpack layers will form differently depending on whether snow is falling in very cold or very warm conditions, and very dry or very humid conditions. Thus, climate change may affect when, where, and how often avalanches occur, and may also change the type of avalanches that are occurring.[58]

Impacts on avalanche type and frequency

[edit]

Overall, a rising seasonal snow line and a decrease in the number of days with snow cover are predicted.[59][60] Climate change-caused temperature increases and changes in precipitation patterns will likely differ between the different mountain regions,[59] and the impacts of these changes on avalanches will change at different elevations. In the long term, avalanche frequency at lower elevations is expected to decline corresponding to a decrease in snow cover and depth, and a short-term increase in the number of wet avalanches are predicted.[59][61][62]

Precipitation is expected to increase, meaning more snow or rain depending on the elevation. Higher elevations predicted to remain above the seasonal snow line will likely see an increase in avalanche activity due to the increases in precipitation during the winter season.[62][63] Storm precipitation intensity is also expected to increase, which is likely to lead to more days with enough snowfall to cause the snowpack to become unstable. Moderate and high elevations may see an increase in volatile swings from one weather extreme to the other.[59] Predictions also show an increase in the number of rain on snow events,[60] and wet avalanche cycles occurring earlier in the spring during the remainder of this century.[64]

Impacts on burial survival rate

[edit]

The warm, wet snowpacks that are likely to increase in frequency due to climate change may also make avalanche burials more deadly. Warm snow has a higher moisture content and is therefore denser than colder snow. Denser avalanche debris decreases the ability for a buried person to breath and the amount of time they have before they run out of oxygen. This increases the likelihood of death by asphyxia in the event of a burial.[65] Additionally, the predicted thinner snowpacks may increase the frequency of injuries due to trauma, such as a buried skier striking a rock or tree.[58]


Avalanches of dust on Mars

[edit]
27 November 2011
29 May 2019

See also

[edit]
[edit]

Avalanche disasters

[edit]

References

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]
  • McClung, David. Snow Avalanches as a Non-critical, Punctuated Equilibrium System: Chapter 24 in Nonlinear Dynamics in Geosciences, A.A. Tsonsis and J.B. Elsner (Eds.), Springer, 2007 [ISBN missing]
  • Daffern, Tony: Avalanche Safety for Skiers, Climbers and Snowboarders, Rocky Mountain Books, 1999, ISBN 0-921102-72-0
  • Billman, John: Mike Elggren on Surviving an Avalanche. Skiing magazine February 2007: 26.
  • McClung, David and Shaerer, Peter: The Avalanche Handbook, The Mountaineers: 2006. ISBN 978-0-89886-809-8
  • Tremper, Bruce: Staying Alive in Avalanche Terrain, The Mountaineers: 2001. ISBN 0-89886-834-3
  • Munter, Werner: Drei mal drei (3x3) Lawinen. Risikomanagement im Wintersport, Bergverlag Rother, 2002. ISBN 3-7633-2060-1 (in German) (partial English translation included in PowderGuide: Managing Avalanche Risk ISBN 0-9724827-3-3)
  • Michael Falser: Historische Lawinenschutzlandschaften: eine Aufgabe für die Kulturlandschafts- und Denkmalpflege In: kunsttexte 3/2010, unter: Historische Lawinenschutzlandschaften: eine Aufgabe für die Kulturlandschafts- und Denkmalpflege

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Snow Avalanches | National Snow and Ice Data Center". nsidc.org. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  2. ^ Louchet, Francois (2021). Snow Avalanches. Oxford University Press. pp. 1–2. doi:10.1093/oso/9780198866930.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-886693-0.
  3. ^ Reuter, B.; Schweizer, J. (2009). Avalanche triggering by sound: Myth and truth (PDF). ISSW 09 – International Snow Science Workshop, Proceedings. pp. 330–333. Based on order of magnitude estimates of the pressure amplitude of various sources that cause elastic or pressure (sound) waves it can be ruled out that shouting or loud noise can trigger snow slab avalanches. The amplitudes are at least about two orders of magnitude smaller than known efficient triggers. Triggering by sound really is a myth.
  4. ^ a b c d McClung, David and Shaerer, Peter: The Avalanche Handbook, The Mountaineers: 2006. ISBN 978-0-89886-809-8
  5. ^ Bartelt, Perry; Lehning, Michael (24 May 2002). "A physical SNOWPACK model for the Swiss avalanche warning Part I: Numerical model". Cold Regions Science and Technology. 35 (3): 123–145. Bibcode:2002CRST...35..123B. doi:10.1016/S0165-232X(02)00074-5. Archived from the original on 28 January 2013 – via www.mendeley.com.
  6. ^ a b "Avalanches: Their Dangers and How to Reduce Your Risks". www.wunderground.com. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  7. ^ Simpson JE. 1997. Gravity currents in the environment and the laboratory. Cambridge University Press
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  10. ^ Abbott, Patrick (2016). Natural Disasters. New York: McGraw-Hill Education. ISBN 978-0-07-802298-2.
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  25. ^ a b "SATSIE Final Report (large PDF file – 33.1 Mb)" (PDF). 31 May 2006. p. 94. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 June 2020. Retrieved 5 April 2008.
  26. ^ "Horizon: Anatomy of an Avalanche". BBC. 25 November 1999.
  27. ^ Avalanche Dynamics Archived 24 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Art Mears, 11 July 2002.
  28. ^ a b Snow Avalanches, Christophe Ancey
  29. ^ Voellmy, A., 1955. Ober die Zerstorunskraft von Lawinen. Schweizerische Bauzetung (English: On the Destructive Force of Avalanches. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service).
  30. ^ Quantification de la sollicitation avalancheuse par analyse en retour du comportement de structures métalliques, page 14, Pôle Grenoblois d'études et de recherche pour la Prévention des risques naturels, October 2003, in French
  31. ^ "SATSIE – Avalanche Studies and Model Validation in Europe". Archived from the original on 12 June 2020. Retrieved 5 April 2008.
  32. ^ Sampl, Peter; Granig, Matthias. "Avalanche Simulation with SAMOS-AT" (PDF). Archives and Special Collections – Montana State University Library. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 August 2022.
  33. ^ "Rapid Mass Movements System RAMMS". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  34. ^ Védrine, Louis; Li, Xingyue; Gaume, Johan (29 March 2022). "Detrainment and braking of snow avalanches interacting with forests". Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences. 22 (3): 1015–1028. Bibcode:2022NHESS..22.1015V. doi:10.5194/nhess-22-1015-2022. hdl:20.500.11850/621336. ISSN 1561-8633.
  35. ^ García-Hernández, C. "Reforestation and land use change as drivers for a decrease of avalanche damage in mid-latitude mountains (NW Spain). Global and Planetary Change, 153:35–50". Elsevier. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
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  37. ^ "Glacier monitoring Weissmies". Retrieved 23 October 2017.
  38. ^ a b "Avalanche Radar Zermatt". Retrieved 23 October 2017.
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  40. ^ Corp, Pelmorex (4 March 2021). "Canada's worst avalanche is the 1910 Rogers Pass disaster, a preventable tragedy". The Weather Network. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
  41. ^ Lee Davis (2008). "Natural Disasters". Infobase Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 0-8160-7000-8
  42. ^ Eduard Rabofsky et al., Lawinenhandbuch, Innsbruck, Verlaganstalt Tyrolia, 1986, p. 11
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  51. ^ An Analysis of French Avalanche Accidents for 2005–2006 Archived 8 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
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  55. ^ a b Snow, weather, and avalanches : observation guidelines for avalanche programs in the United States. American Avalanche Association,, National Avalanche Center. Pagosa Springs, CO. 2010. ISBN 978-0-9760118-1-1. OCLC 798732486.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
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  58. ^ a b Strapazzon, Giacomo; Schweizer, Jürg; Chiambretti, Igor; Brodmann Maeder, Monika; Brugger, Hermann; Zafren, Ken (12 April 2021). "Effects of Climate Change on Avalanche Accidents and Survival". Frontiers in Physiology. 12: 639433. doi:10.3389/fphys.2021.639433. ISSN 1664-042X. PMC 8072472. PMID 33912070.
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  63. ^ Salzer, Friedrich; Studeregger, Arnold (2010). "Climate Change in Lower Austria – A Snow Cover Analysis of the Last 100 Years With a Special Emphasis on the Last Century and the Impact of the Avalanche Situation in Lower Austria". 2010 International Snow Science Workshop: 362–366.
  64. ^ Lazar, Brian; Williams, Mark (2006). "Climate Change in Western Ski Areas: Timing of Wet Avalanches in Aspen Ski Area in the Years 2030 and 2100". Proceedings of the 2006 International Snow Science Workshop, Telluride, Colorado: 899–906.
  65. ^ Strapazzon, Giacomo; Paal, Peter; Schweizer, Jürg; Falk, Markus; Reuter, Benjamin; Schenk, Kai; Gatterer, Hannes; Grasegger, Katharina; Dal Cappello, Tomas; Malacrida, Sandro; Riess, Lukas (15 December 2017). "Effects of snow properties on humans breathing into an artificial air pocket – an experimental field study". Scientific Reports. 7 (1): 17675. Bibcode:2017NatSR...717675S. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-17960-4. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5732296. PMID 29247235.
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