Avalanche

An avalanche is a mass of snow and ice falling suddenly down a mountain slope and often taking with it earth, rocks and rubble of every description (WMO, 1992).

Thousands of avalanches occur every year, killing an average of 500 people worldwide. Avalanches occur when massive slabs of snow break loose from a mountainside and shatter like broken glass as they race downhill. These moving masses can reach speeds of 130 km/hour within about five seconds. They cannot always be predicted but the weather conditions, which make them more likely, can be forecast in advance. Most accidents now occur because people ignore warnings. The majority of avalanche incidents are due to slab avalanches with skiers involved. Avalanches are bigger, travel greater distances and are triggered earlier in the year. These changes can be attributed clearly to rising temperatures, which have reached 0.2 to 0.4 degrees annually in some parts of the Himalayas.

Avalanche protection and control measures include early warning which is key (EAWS). By way of controlled explosions, artificial avalanche triggering aims temporarily to safeguard possible starting zones (SLF). Defensive structures prevent the formation of avalanches. In order circumstances, when an avalanche is released, it can be diverted or intercepted by a dam. Other means of protection against avalanches include physical structures for buildings and snow sheds (SLF).

Avalanche risk factors

  • Quick changes in weather, snowpack and terrain.
  • Increasing human populations: winter sports lovers at ski resorts and developers building in vulnerable locations.
  • Climate change.

Vulnerable areas

  • Human settlements in avalanche-prone zones.
  • Rural mountainous villages with no early warning systems.
  • Human settlements with no forest cover.
  • Skiing populations and tourists not educated in avalanche risk.

Risk reduction measures

  • Not constructing buildings, roads, etc. in avalanche hazard areas.
  • Early warning systems at local and national levels.
  • Information on avalanches, their impacts and risks for tourism information offices.
  • Tree planting to protect against the release of avalanches.
  • Building codes and appropriate materials to reinforce resilience.
  • Raising awareness, educating and training residents and visitors on what to do before, during and after an avalanche.

Latest Avalanche additions in the Knowledge Base

Human experts will continue to produce the avalanche bulletin in future, but computer assessments based on weather data and other measurements have a valuable role to play as a “second opinion”.
WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research SLF
Cover page of the journal pre-proof
This paper addresses the visual communication issues with a focus on natural hazards which vary in time and space or purely in space. This study is a follow up of a previous study on the efficacy of communication of avalanche warnings.
Space agencies such as NASA and the European Space Agency and companies such as Planet Labs are providing free, medium-to-high resolution images of Earth, encouraging independent research and scientific investigations.
Conversation Media Group, the
Farmers plowing a field in Kenya
Initiatives to build the resilience of vulnerable people living on the frontlines of climate change are growing worldwide, but they are often disjointed, small and short-term.
Thomson Reuters Foundation, trust.org
Satellite images could offer a new way to monitor for avalanche threats to remote mountain communities, according to Aberdeen scientists studying a deadly Himalayan avalanche.
University of Aberdeen
Computer simulations of snow cover can accurately forecast avalanche hazard, according to a new international study involving researchers from Simon Fraser University.
Simon Fraser University
Measuring devices are once again being temporarily installed on the slopes of Dürrboden in Davos for the winter. These devices are used to automatically detect avalanches and will help improve future avalanche bulletins.
WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research SLF
A new sensor for daily snow cover tracking could make winter a lot less challenging.
Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique

Is this page useful?

Yes No
Report an issue on this page

Thank you. If you have 2 minutes, we would benefit from additional feedback (link opens in a new window).