Avalanche
Accident Report
December
16, 2008
Accident
Report by Brett Kobernik
Location:
Accident
and Rescue Summary:
A group
of three snowmobilers left from
Terrain Summary:
There is lots of avalanche prone terrain near
Guardsmen’s Pass.
Avalanche
Data:
The
avalanche was up to 1000’ wide and ran about 500 feet vertical. It was most likely in the 1 to 2 foot deep
range. The exact details about this
avalanche are not known but it had a very similar snowpack structure to numerous
other locations around the upper Cottonwood Canyons. More likely then not, the snow failed either
in faceted snow just above the late November crust or in facets just below the
crust. This avalanche was originally
reported as a natural avalanche to the
Weather
and Avalanche History: (Seasonal Weather Charts)
Snow
started to pile up in early November.
During one of the periods of snow a rain/rime event occurred and
produced some crusts. These were buried
by more snow. This snow sat around and
faceted for a number of weeks until another storm occurred around
Thanksgiving. This storm also produced
another rain/rime event that was even more pronounced then the first. A bit more snow fell on top of the resulting
crust then faceted in early December.
The set up was a crust sandwiched between faceted snow above and below
it. Another storm occurred on the 8th
of December which was not enough to build a dangerous slab. However the next series of storms starting on
the 13th would be enough to produce avalanches. By December 16th numerous natural
and human triggered avalanches had occurred and were reported daily by the
Comments: (Photos)
This
slope is the exact location described in the daily avalanche advisory (Advisory
12-16-08) of places where you were most likely to trigger an
avalanche. The weak crust/facet
combination with a slab on top of it is just the set up needed to be able to
trigger avalanches from a distance which is what this group did. They ignored a cardinal rule of thumb in that
only one person should be on any given avalanche path at a time. Luckily, this story had a happy ending. This could have just as easily been a tragic
accident ending with a fatality.
This is
the sight of an avalanche accident that caught a snowmobiler and buried him to
his waist and his machine completely.
Click HERE for the accident report.
The avalanche was triggered at the bottom of the avalanche path.
Here is a
very joyful member of the group standing in front of the avalanche. The crown is marked with arrows along the
ridge in the background.
The group
has the snowmobile mostly dug out in this photo.
Here is a
photo of the avalanche that one of the UAC observers took from near Peak
10420. He thought the avalanche had occurred
naturally.