A few comments:
1a) Adrenalated makes some hugely important points...The Mammoth Mountain results from the past few days
clearly indicate that hitting the sweet spot on a slope with less force (order(s) of magnitude less?) can generate catastrophic results that military weapons (40 lb warhead) could not produce. I believe that the skier versus bombing argument will only lead to incorrect assessments, particularly in scenarios where deep failure propagation across a large area is at the peak of concern.
1b) In AIARE III, we spent a good bit of time probing the alpine to look for shallow regions across larger hazard areas that could serve as examples of these sensitive failure locations that would act to allow failure (collapse) and propagation of the failure across the slope. There are many, and these are what you don't want to find yourself!
2) The current avalanche cycle (and the Mt Rose avalanche incident/cycle) have many characteristics highlighted during large widespread avalanche cycles in the western US discussed in a paper that is currently in revision for the
Journal of Hydrometeorology. I presented preliminary results at the International Atmospheric Rivers conference this August.
The presentation can be found here. Summary: Early storms followed by dry, cold weather and low solar insolation and subsequent significant precipitation/loading (often due to ARs) are a grand recipe for massive avalanche cycles.
3) The Upside Down V (aka Fireplug) is one of the most non-textbook classic paths in the Rose region and such results are completely unsurprising. Good on the people for reporting their story, but the amount of mistakes they made are quite shocking. Very lucky outcome for a variety of obvious reasons.
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