Natural Wind Slab Avalanche on Elephants Hump

Location Name: 
Elephants Hump
Region: 
Carson Pass Area
Observation Date & Time: 
Wednesday, December 18, 2019 - 11:45
Location: 
38.691945, -119.969057
Is this an Avalanche Observation?: 
Yes


Conditions Alerts:


Terrain Alerts: 
Slopes Steeper than 30 degrees
Obvious Slide Path
Trigger Points
Terrain Traps
Terrain Matches the Advisory

Observation made by: Forecaster

Tabs

Observation
Description of Snow, Weather, and Avalanche Conditions: 

 Thursday Dec 19:  Avalanche investigation was done at site and an updated observation is posted.

 

We observed a natural wind slab avalanche that was thought to have occurred sometime early this Wednesday morning.  Shifting strong winds in the Carson Pass area over the last 4 days have left many above treeline areas scoured with hard wind slabs in other locations.  Strong to gale force SW winds started blowing on Carson Pass via remote weather data yesterday afternoon.  This avalanche location is along a lower ridge below Elephants Hump in mostly near treeline terrain at 8400', northerly aspect, with a convex rollover.

Human triggered wind slabs were forecasted for today in near and above treeline terrain.  What makes this wind slab somewhat unique is the propagation that was associated with it.  This wind slab had horizontal propagation along the ridge and went around a slight corner to another aspect that also released.  The avalanche was at least 200' wide and ran down slope 30 to 200'.  The crown and bed surface were partially covered up by additional wind loading.  The hard slab nature of the wind slab and that the slope was actively reloading did not allow for safe entry on to the slope.  Shooting cracks went from the avalanche and on into lower angle terrain.  A collapse was felt on a hard slab while investigating the avalanche.

The wide propagation, shooting cracks, and collapse have all the ingredients of a faceted grain type failure below this wind slab.  It is thought that previous surface hoar or near surface facets may have somehow survived the recent winds and become buried under the wind slab.  Grain type identification was not possible with the winds and conditions despite best efforts.  Further observations are needed to determine weak layer grain type and how widespread this may be.  

 

Snowpit or crown profile photo or graph: 
Hide Avalanche Details
Avalanche Type: 
Wind Slab
Failure Plane/Weak Layer: 
Old Snow
Hide Trigger
Trigger: 
Natural
Hide Terrain
Aspect: 
North
Starting Elevation: 
near-treeline
Hide Size
Destructive Size: 
D2 Could bury, injure, or kill a person.
Crown Height: 
2 ft
Avalanche Width (Average width): 
200ft.
Avalanche Length (Vertical Run): 
200ft.
Hide Weather Details
Elevation of Observation: 
8000 - 9000 ft.
Above 9000 ft.
Blowing Snow: 
Intense
Wind Direction: 
Southwest
Wind Speed: 
Gale Force
Sky Cover: 
Scattered - Partly Cloudy - 3/8 to 4/8 covered
Air temperature: 
Below Freezing
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