While avalanches are sudden, the warning signs are almost
always numerous before they let loose. Yet in 90 percent of avalanche
incidents, the snow slides are triggered by the victim or someone in the
victim's party. Avalanches kill more than 150 people worldwide each
year. Most are snowmobilers, skiers, and snowboarders.
Many
avalanches are small slides of dry powdery snow that move as a formless
mass. These "sluffs" account for a tiny fraction of the death and
destruction wrought by their bigger, more organized cousins. Disastrous
avalanches occur when massive slabs of snow break loose from a
mountainside and shatter like broken glass as they race downhill. These
moving masses can reach speeds of 80 miles (130 kilometers) per hour
within about five seconds. Victims caught in these events seldom escape.
Avalanches are most common during and in the 24 hours right after a
storm that dumps 12 inches (30 centimeters) or more of fresh snow. The
quick pileup overloads the underlying snowpack, which causes a weak
layer beneath the slab to fracture. The layers are an archive of winter
weather: Big dumps, drought, rain, a hard freeze, and more snow. How the
layers bond often determines how easily one will weaken and cause a
slide.
Storminess, temperature, wind, slope steepness and
orientation (the direction it faces), terrain, vegetation, and general
snowpack conditions are all factors that influence whether and how a
slope avalanches. Different combinations of these factors create low,
moderate, considerable, and high avalanche hazards.
If caught in
an avalanche, try to get off the slab. Not easy, in most instances.
Skiers and snowboarders can head straight downhill to gather speed then
veer left or right out of the slide path. Snowmobilers can punch the
throttle to power out of harm's way. No escape? Reach for a tree. No
tree? Swim hard. The human body is three times denser than avalanche
debris and will sink quickly. As the slide slows, clear air space to
breathe. Then punch a hand skyward.
Once the avalanche stops, it
settles like concrete. Bodily movement is nearly impossible. Wait—and
hope—for a rescue. Statistics show that 93 percent of avalanche victims
survive if dug out within 15 minutes. Then the survival rates drop fast.
After 45 minutes, only 20 to 30 percent of victims are alive. After two
hours, very few people survive.
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