12 inches of dense new snow was enough to produce obviously unstable conditions on slopes with a pre-Thanksgiving snowpack. Several weak layers exist, including recently formed surface hoar beneath the new snow as well as deeper facets from the October snow.
30cm new snow at all elevations.
# | Date | Location | Size | Type | Bed Sfc | Depth | Trigger | Comments | Photo |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Down the ridge from Copper summit NE 8600 |
D1 | SS | O-Old Snow | 30-40cm |
AS-Skier r-Remote |
Triggered remotely with a cornice drop. | None | |
2 |
Down the ridge from Copper summit NE 8600 |
D1.5 | SS | O-Old Snow | 30-40cm | N-Natural | Two natural avalanches observed. One was D1 and occurred midstorm. The other (in the photo) was D1.5 and a bit more fresh looking. |
Average snow depth ranged from around 40cm at the highway to around 80cm on upper elevation shaded aspects. At lower elevations and on solars, the new snow fell onto bare ground or just a bit of snow. Relatively widespread 1-3cm SH beneath the new snow at the 12/7 interface - see photo of a SW aspect at 8400'. Upper elevation shaded aspects have a weak MF crust beneath the Thanksgiving snow with depth hoar below. Collapsing and cracking was widespread in these areas - walking in undisturbed snow would spider web the vicinity with cracks. We remotely triggered one small slide with a cornice drop.
Problem | Location | Distribution | Sensitivity | Size | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Persistent Slab |
|
Layer Depth/Date: 30-40cm/20191127 & 20191207 Comments: The 20191207 SH is a bit more widespread but less reactive due to having less slab. |
We planned to avoid avalanche terrain, and the widespread signs of instability gave us no reason to change that plan!