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  2. Avalanche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avalanche

    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.

  3. Avalanches: What causes innocent-looking snow slopes to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/avalanches-causes-innocent-looking...

    An avalanche swept up skiers at Lake Tahoe's largest ski resort on Jan. 10, 2024, as a 150-foot-wide sheet of snow slid down a mountain slope into a pile 10 feet deep.

  4. List of avalanches by death toll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_avalanches_by...

    1938 Unazuki avalanche [8] Japan: 1938: 19 81: Pragelato: Italy: 1904: 20 79 (57 confirmed 22 presumed dead) 1954 Blons avalanches: Austria: 1954: 21 70: Frassino avalanche: Italy: 1885: 22 65: Palm Sunday Avalanche; deadliest avalanche along Chilkoot Trail : United States: 1898: 23 62: 1910 Rogers Pass avalanche; deadliest avalanche in Canada ...

  5. Wellington, Washington - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wellington,_Washington

    Train wreckage caused by the avalanche. The Wellington avalanche was the deadliest avalanche in the history of the United States, marked by the total death count of 96. [2] For nine days at the end of February 1910, the Wellington area experienced a severe blizzard.

  6. What to do if you get caught in an avalanche - AOL

    www.aol.com/2017-05-16-what-to-do-if-you-get...

    Avalanches kill an average of 39 people in North America every year.

  7. Idaho’s ‘Avalanche Alley’ is one of the most dangerous ...

    www.aol.com/idaho-avalanche-alley-one-most...

    The Lowman avalanche team — consisting of three people and will soon grow to four — begins tracking potential avalanche paths around October, Garz said.

  8. Avalanche Mountain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avalanche_Mountain

    The mountain's name was applied by Major A.B. Rogers and stems from its history of avalanches from its western slopes onto Rogers Pass. [7] The 1910 Rogers Pass avalanche, the deadliest avalanche in Canadian history, resulted in the deaths of 62 Canadian Pacific Railway workers and was the impetus which forced the railway to build the Connaught Tunnel.

  9. Avalanche control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avalanche_control

    Avalanche blasting in the French ski resort of Tignes (3,600 m or 11,800 ft) Gazex installation. Active techniques reduce the risk of an avalanche occurring by promoting the stabilization and settlement of the snow pack through three forms of intervention: disrupting weak layers in the snow pack, increasing the uniformity of the snow pack, and lessening the amount of snow available in snow ...