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  1. #1
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    An uncommon avalanche

    http://www.mountwashingtonavalanchec...day-3-29-2014/
    Click the link for pictures.

    On March 29, 2014, USFS Snow Rangers received a radio call from the Harvard Mountaineering Club caretaker that a large avalanche occurred on the Southeast slope of the “Summit Cone” of Mount Washington. Weather conditions on this Saturday were in and out of the clouds with temperatures around 30F . Being the first nice day after an otherwise unseasonably cold winter, there were dozens of skiers making their way into Tuckerman Ravine with some parties heading on to the summit snowfields. This area is not forecasted by the avalanche center however, the avalanche hazard posted for the day in Tuckerman and Huntington Ravine was Moderate with the primary concern being wet slabs. Persistent slabs were listed as problem number two with a reference contained in the snowpack discussion about the rating being a “scary moderate”. The avalanche was triggered by one of two parties skiing nearby at approximately 1pm.
    20140329

    View from Lion Head trail above Right Gully as Snow Rangers approached the scene.



    This avalanche was unusual in that this slope, as well as the nearby East Snowfields, rarely avalanches, or more accurately, is rarely witnessed to avalanche, despite a slope angle capable of producing a slide. Small avalanches are occasionally triggered near Split Rock on the Lion Head trail but an avalanche of this magnitude anywhere on the summit cone is exceptional. Prior Snow Ranger Brad Ray, whose work in the Ravines dated back to the early 60′s, confirmed that this avalanche is larger by far than any other avalanche he was aware of in this location. Several factors probably contribute to the lack of avalanche activity here including an abundance of large boulders to serve as anchors, a snowpack which is typically hammered into hard wind slab by high winds as well as relatively few skiers and climbers to serve as triggers during the mid-winter. Mid-winter natural avalanches that may occur may also go unseen, but this slope fits all the parameters required for avalanching. In this case, mitigating factors were not in play. Heavy snowfall in the month of March buried many of the boulders in the middle of the track which might have served as anchors. The buried weak layer of small facets beneath the ice crust was generally buried deeply in many locations, out of reach of the impact of ski or foot traffic. And while this weak layer was scoured out of many steeper slopes of Tuckerman and Huntington by avalanches earlier in the season, to our knowledge, the Southeast snowfield had not avalanched, or seen much ski traffic, until this day.

    The avalanche shortly after intiation. Note the party of 5 in the upper left and the party of 8 skinning uphill to the right.

    The photos in this series, taken by an MWOBS volunteer, show the proximity of two groups to the avalanche and the flow of debris. Conversations with one of the skiers seen low and to the right of the avalanche is one of the factors that leads us to believe that the avalanche was remotely triggered. The skier interviewed, a former HMC caretaker stated that he felt a collapse followed by a much louder, widespread collapse. The party then turned to see the toe of the slope behind them ripple as it compressed and then watched as the slope collapsed. Snow temperatures at a snow profile on the right flank helped rule out heating of the slab as the primary factor temperatures at the crust facet layer. Temperature at the crust was -5C with all but the surface layer dry and cold. It is also possible that the party near the upper left corner of the crown line may have triggered the slab but they were not interviewed on this matter.
    DSCN3813

    Further into the slide.
    DSCN3814

    Note the gouge left by the boulder.
    DSCN3815

    Searchers entering the debris.

    The events leading up to the triggering of the avalanche were pieced together by USFS Snow Rangers from eyewitness accounts of parties on or near the slope. A group of volunteers who had been out for a walk from the MWOBS, happened to capture on camera the avalanche in motion. Immediately following the avalanche, nearby parties completed avalanche beacon signal searches. Parties nearby also accounted for members of their own parties but concerns for the whereabouts of a party of sledders (plastic toy toboggans not snowmobiles) was in question, as well as nagging concerns that some small party may have been in the area and gone unnoticed. Unfortunately, it is not unusual to see people travelling alone on Mt. Washington, in avalanche terrain, so the need for a search effort was acted on. Two USFS Snow Rangers responded from Tuckerman Ravine with an avalanche search dog. Efforts to search were still underway on their arrival with a large group probing on the debris field. Due to the risk of a second avalanche from hangfire, Forest Service Snow Rangers reassembled the group off of the debris, posted a lookout above the slope and staged resources for rescue efforts should another avalanche occur. Further interviews were performed and it was determined to be unlikely that a person was caught. Regardless, a dog search continued and soon, another organized scuff search was performed for any clues that may have been previously overlooked. Not long after more detailed searching began, the photos of the avalanche in motion were studied and the potential for buried victims was ruled out.
    Early stage of initial search efforts by 24 bystanders.

    Early stage of initial search efforts by volunteers.

    The depth of debris, which came to rest after a vertical fall of 390’, was deposited deeply at the transition to the lower angled Alpine Garden. Debris deposit estimates range around 20 feet in depth in the deepest areas and consisted generally of blocky hard slabs of snow riddled with voids of softer snow or just holes. Due to the short track of the avalanche, it did not reach speeds capable of generating the kind of turbulence which would mix the debris and deposit it in a more solid mass typical of most slab avalanches. The avalanche crown averaged 1m thick, perhaps up to 1.4m in places, 200m across and was composed of 4 or more distinct pencil hard slabs. Vertical fall was 390’ with a track of 850’. The weak layer in the snowpack consisted of faceted snow beneath an ice crust which developed during the cold weather following a rain event on January 11.This crust and facet layer was the culprit of several avalanche cycles in Tuckerman Ravine, and Huntington Ravine to a lesser extent, over the span of months since its development. Due to deteriorating visibility, only a cursory snow profile was completed.
    Snow Ranger speaking with a member of the party reporting the collapse. A quick snow profile was performed here on the right flank before clouds closed in.

    Snow Ranger speaking with a member of the party reporting the collapse. A quick snow profile was performed here on the right flank before clouds closed in.

    The nature of the deep, persistent slab avalanche hazard is such that it requires some stress to trigger. The weight of new snow, rain, or a skier can stress the harder slab of snow over the weak layer until fractures, possibly leading to slope failure. It is important to recognize that the rocks in a slope with this sort of avalanche problem begin to serve as trigger points or perforations in an otherwise strong slab of snow once the snow depth reaches a certain tipping point.

    Some reminders emerged after the incident:

    1) Use available resources such as avalanche advisories and weather reports as a tool. However you need to make your own assessments and independent decisions as you travel. At least basic avalanche education is highly recommended for anyone playing in the mountains in winter.

    2) It is still winter in the mountains with all the hazards that go along with that season. Spring hazards are emerging too. Check this website daily for advisories and changing hazards.

    3) The summit cone is not in our forecast area but the avalanche problem that caused this avalanche was in our advisory for Tuckerman and Huntington. See #1 above.

    4) Please report an avalanche if you witness one. Rescue efforts require significant effort, potential risks and may divert resources from other incidents so gather as much information as you safely can

  2. #2
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    to this day, some of the biggest debris ive ever seen was on the floor of the ravine.. chunks the size of lawn chairs. washington is one hell of a mtn that deserves a whole lot of respect. sounds like those guys were in the right place at the wrong time..
    long live the jahrator

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by totaliboard View Post
    to this day, some of the biggest debris ive ever seen was on the floor of the ravine.. chunks the size of lawn chairs. washington is one hell of a mtn that deserves a whole lot of respect. sounds like those guys were in the right place at the wrong time..
    What I keep thinking about with this avy is, there's no way I would have seen this coming, I woulda danced all over that slope that day. Looking back I can see how it would happen, I don't believe that this area is a safe zone, but I wouldn't have fathomed that just days after 100 mph winds, this could still be triggered, on a moderate day.

    Also, the report says that heating was not the prime reason for the avalanche, but I wonder if the warming of the slab weakened its bridging properties just enough to allow the collapse.

  4. #4
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    and there were multiple human slope testers running about the slope that coulda had just enough impact........

    i also woulda danced all over that slope without pause given the history of how the typical wx affects the snow up there throughout a season.

    rog
    Last edited by icelanticskier; 03-31-2014 at 06:59 PM.

  5. #5
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    I'm in the same boat. A seemingly benign snowpack, and yet hindsight tells us it was probably unstable all along.. You can see signs of windloading/scour where the group is standing near the crown, but it takes a very aware and experienced eye to piece those clues together in the heat of battle (aka on the slope)..
    long live the jahrator

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by totaliboard View Post
    [...]A seemingly benign snowpack, and yet hindsight tells us it was probably unstable all along.. [...]
    Hindsight may tell us that now, but so did the avy bulletin that morning:

    Quote Originally Posted by USFS avy bulletin that morning for the microforecasted glacial cirque a few hundred vert below
    [...] human triggered avalanches are possible in all forecast areas. [...] The monster lurking in the basement for me is the presence of some weak interfaces between older windslabs as well as some areas of pooled, rimed snow which have been very stubborn, but would have devastating consequences if triggered. Because of this “Scary Moderate” comes to mind. The unobvious nature of these deeper slabs are why we carry beacons, probes and shovels and practice careful travel techniques (minimizing time spent in the fall line of avalanche paths, one at a time travel, etc.). It may feel more like spring today but the snowpack stills tells me that it is winter.
    Mo' skimo here: NE Rando Race Series

  7. #7
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    I'm still a noob to this stuff but I'd like to think that reading about persistent slab for weeks in MWAC bulletins would have had my spidey sense tingling at least a little. Not a coincidence that an unusual avalanche happened in a season with an unusual type of danger for a maritime snowpack?

  8. #8
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    p.s.
    Quote Originally Posted by neufox47 View Post
    The skier interviewed, a former HMC caretaker stated that he felt a collapse followed by a much louder, widespread collapse. The party then turned to see the toe of the slope behind them ripple as it compressed and then watched as the slope collapsed.
    I'm thinking that is a party of skiers in need of new thermal underwear.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by monkfish View Post
    I'm still a noob to this stuff but I'd like to think that reading about persistent slab for weeks in MWAC bulletins would have had my spidey sense tingling at least a little. Not a coincidence that an unusual avalanche happened in a season with an unusual type of danger for a maritime snowpack?
    yup, unusual unusuals. still tho, EXTREMELY rare. like twice in at least 60 years and the other one was MUCH smaller. all the ingredients were there for a slide, obviously, but the wind/weather and how it affects the snow stack up, up there is quite a bit different than in our more sheltered protected steep terrain that sits below about 5200 feet and is forecasted for.

    can it be spring already?

    rog

  10. #10
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    Bizarre shit! Powder just put up an article about it:

    http://www.powdermag.com/avalanche-e...he-east-coast/

    Can't believe no one got caught if there were 20 people up there!
    "We're in the eye of a shiticane here Julian, and Ricky's a low shit system!" - Jim Lahey, RIP

    Former Managing Editor @ TGR, forever mag.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ryan Dunfee View Post

    Can't believe no one got caught if there were 20 people up there!
    Wasn't meant to be. This time

    rog

  12. #12
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    People have a hard time dealing with low probability/hi consequence events. At Mt Hood Meadows a few years ago, Patrol launched an AC charge into Upper Heather Canyon. No slide. Further recon - looked OK. People skied on it all day - no problems. At 7PM that evening, the whole slope slid - hudge.

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