http://www.avalanche.ca/cac/library/avalanche-accidents
4 volumes, on the right hand side. Each volume covers a time period, Volume 4 is the most recent.
a lot of fatailities, so not exactly a light summer read. However, they are well written, and include data/figures. I took an avalanche class, and what was missing was empirical data (from an engineering background), these results produced an avalanche on this degree slope. I even said to the instructor that the only way we get feed back on our test interpretation is if the slope fails, but that was brushed aside.
The whole 15 min to dig up a person stat you hear thrown around is also not supported by this. I skimmed it, and it seemed like a lot of fatailities were recovered within 15 minutes but died to asphyxiation (not the trauma ones). Recovered in 7 mins, not breatihing, revived with CPR. Saying you need CPR training is pretty obvious though. One guy survived 55 minutes because he made an air pocket. One dog surived and dug himself out in an 18-20 hour period.
On Page 69, Volume 4, it recounts 1 heli-skier fataility, caues "isolated weakness". They skiied all day on the slope, and it was tracked up when it slid. That is terrifying.
I'm sharing this because I found it interesting.
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