Avalanche

Avalanche

Avalanche Latest News

Three Army personnel, including two Agniveers, lost their lives recently in a major avalanche at the Siachen base camp in Ladakh.

About Avalanche

  • An avalanche is a large amount of snow that quickly moves down a slope. 
  • An avalanche can be deadly because it will bury or sweep away anything in its path. 
  • Large amounts of sliding rocks, earth, or other materials may also be called avalanches. But these are often known as landslides.
  • Many different conditions make an avalanche possible. 
    • An avalanche is more likely to happen on a slope without trees or large rocks. These things help to keep snow in place. 
    • A weak layer of snow also makes an avalanche likely. 
  • Once the conditions are right, several things can start an avalanche.
    • Heavy snowfall, strong wind, and rising temperatures all can loosen snow on a slope. 
    • Falling rocks or ice also can cause snow to slide. 
    • Even the movement of a skier, a snowboarder, or a snowmobile can trigger an avalanche.
  • There are two main types of snow avalanches—sluffs and slabs. 
  • Sluff avalanches occur when the weak layer of a snowpack is on the top. 
    • A sluff is a small slide of dry, powdery snow that moves as a formless mass. 
    • Sluffs are much less dangerous than slab avalanches.
  • A slab avalanche occurs when the weak layer lies lower down in a snowpack. 
    • This layer is covered with other layers of compressed snow. 
    • When the avalanche is triggered, the weak layer breaks off, pulling all the layers on top of it down the slope. 
    • These layers tumble and fall in a giant block, or slab.
  • Avalanches vary in destructive power from harmless to large enough to destroy mature forests or flatten villages.
  • When an avalanche stops, the snow becomes solid like concrete, and people are unable to dig out. 
  • People caught in avalanches can die from suffocation, trauma, or hypothermia.
  • People in mountainous areas protect themselves from avalanches in several ways. 
    • Special fences help to hold snow in place. 
    • Barriers help to stop sliding snow or change its direction. 
    • Explosives help to clear snow from places where avalanches are likely to occur.

Source: IT

Avalanche FAQs

Q1: What is an avalanche?

Ans: An avalanche is a large amount of snow that quickly moves down a slope.

Q2: What are the two main types of snow avalanches?

Ans: Sluffs and slabs

Q3: What happens during a slab avalanche?

Ans: A weak lower snow layer breaks, pulling compressed layers above it.

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