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- <text id=93TT1093>
- <title>
- Mar. 08, 1993: Eluding the White Death
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 08, 1993 The Search for the Tower Bomber
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATURE, Page 61
- Eluding the White Death
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A narrow escape for five skiers lost in the Colorado snow highlights
- a record season of avalanches
- </p>
- <p>By J. MADELEINE NASH--With reporting by Joni H. Blackman/Denver
- </p>
- <p> To a seasoned skier, nothing could be more alluring than a
- descent into a high-country valley carpeted with fresh-fallen
- snow. And nothing could be more treacherous. The same pristine
- slopes that offer powder hounds the thrill of carving first
- tracks can conceal thrills of a more perilous kind: avalanches,
- known to mountaineers as the "white death." Avalanches have
- already claimed 19 lives in the U.S. this winter. And last week
- five Coloradans, who lost their way in a subzero Aspen blizzard,
- were almost added to that number, raising awareness of the hazard.
- </p>
- <p> "We never doubted we would make it," declared 50-year-old Ken
- Torp. Along with one companion, Torp fought his way to a trading
- post after five days in the wilderness. "It was just a question
- of how ugly and how nasty and how difficult and how uncomfortable
- it was going to be, and how many fingers we would freeze on
- the way." The three other lost skiers were found by a search
- party.
- </p>
- <p> There is no question that Torp and his friends were tempting
- fate. They set out despite storm and avalanche warnings. During
- their sojourn, the skiers repeatedly heard the roar of snowslides
- letting loose. "It was sheer luck they didn't get caught in
- one," says Doug Bitterman, the avalanche forecaster who posted
- that day's warnings. Nearly three dozen avalanches rumbled through
- the area, posing an enormous risk to the rescuers.
- </p>
- <p> For the Colorado Rockies, this has been a season of slides.
- So far, this winter is shaping up as a record breaker. There
- have already been 2,260 avalanches, some of them powerful enough
- to topple full-grown trees. The reason for the surge is simple:
- big storms have dumped record amounts of snow throughout the
- Mountain West. Too much snow falling in too short a period sets
- up the slopes for a slide. The most recent avalanches, for instance,
- occurred in the wake of a storm that dumped as much as 8 ft.
- of the white stuff.
- </p>
- <p> Avalanche danger is highest just after a storm because the snow
- crystals have not had time to forge bonds to one another and
- to crystals in the existing snowpack. Typically, bonding occurs
- over a few days' time. Under certain conditions, however, the
- crystals never bond, but remain loose like a pile of poker chips.
- This dangerous situation commonly occurs in Colorado, where
- temperatures are very cold (snow crystals bond most readily
- close to their melting point). The shape of the crystals is
- important too. A layer of graupel--soft hailstones that behave
- like miniature ball bearings--substantially increases the
- avalanche hazard. In essence, graupel provides a high-speed
- conveyor belt for the layers of snow deposited on top. Another
- kind of trouble comes in the guise of sugar snow--coarse grains
- created when water vapor freezes and refreezes. In Colorado
- a layer of sugar snow formed early in the season, and has greatly
- added to the risk.
- </p>
- <p> Once conditions are right, it doesn't take much to trigger a
- slide. And usually, there is very little warning. "Sometimes
- you hear a crack like thunder," says U.S. Forest Service research
- scientist Sue Ferguson, who has been caught in several small
- slides. "Sometimes the avalanche releases quietly, like rustling
- silk." Traveling at speeds that can exceed 80 m.p.h., the rushing
- snowpack compresses the air at its prow, generating a wind blast
- strong enough to smash windows and hurl skiers into trees. Once
- the avalanche stops, the snow mass solidifies, entombing its
- victims in an icy grip.
- </p>
- <p> For skiers who stick to groomed runs, avalanches pose little
- hazard. Most major ski resorts operate military-style control
- programs that rely on explosive charges to trigger slides on
- avalanche-prone slopes before skiers head for the lifts. But
- increasingly, skiers are stepping beyond the boundaries set
- by resorts--prompted in part by long lift lines and the high
- cost of lift tickets as well as the thirst for adventure. "What
- they don't realize," says Dale Atkins, who forecasts avalanches
- for the state of Colorado, "is that once they cross under that
- quarter-inch rope, they've gone from a safe, managed area to
- the wild unknown of Mother Nature."
- </p>
- <p> Backcountry skiers can substantially reduce their risk by heeding
- avalanche-center warnings, which rank the danger as low, medium,
- high and extreme. Forecasters routinely dig pits into targeted
- slopes to probe the condition of the snow below. Sometimes they
- even check the stability of the slope by carving ski-size slices
- through a test area, then standing or jumping on it. In general,
- south-facing slopes are less prone to avalanches because warmth
- from the sun promotes the bonding of the snowpack. Avalanches
- are also rare on slopes with inclines of less than 30 degrees.
- But there are exceptions to all these rules.
- </p>
- <p> Though Coloradans were relieved that no lives were lost in last
- week's episode, many expressed resentment that the ski party
- had glided so recklessly into danger. At week's end Torp announced
- that he and his companions would raise money to defray the estimated
- $20,000 cost of a rescue effort that put dozens of others face-to-face
- with the white death.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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