Zoa North Slopes

Map for Mountain Information Network report: Zoa North Slopes

Information

Avalanche date/time
Sunday, February 2, 2025 at 23:00
Estimated occurrence time of avalanche
From 24 to 48 hours ago
Number of avalanches in this report
1
The size of avalanche
1.5
Slab thickness
60cm
Slab width
20m
Run length
150m
Avalanche Character
  • Storm slab
Trigger type
Skier
Trigger subtype
Accidental
Start zone aspect
  • NE
Start zone elevation band
  • Treeline
Start zone elevation
1,700m
Start zone incline
40°
Runout zone elevation
1,675m
Weak layer burial date
Friday, January 31, 2025
Wind exposure
Cross-loaded slope
Vegetation cover
Sparse trees or gladed slope

Comments

Skier unintentionally triggered small slab (crown 15 cm, ~5 m wide) that subsequently triggered a larger slab (up to 60 cm deep, 20 m wide) on the lee side (NE) of a bulge. The slab broke on a small but steep convex slope that appeared to be mostly unsupported below the roll over where the coverage was thin, note exposed rocks and ice. The avalanche ran on a firm bed surface, specifically a firm but breakable series of crusts (1F - P) that developed during the two week dry period. The storm slab stepped down and released another thin slab (10 cm) within the series of crusts. These crusts consist of a combination of melt/freeze crusts that are somewhat bonded and characterized by variation across subtle changes in aspect. The resulting debris was fairly soft and compressible under foot. In all, the avalanche revealed features of the snowpack very much consistent with the results of a compression test nearby. This avalanche, lacking a cohesive slab, remained isolated to a small terrain feature but future loading and larger terrain features, alpine bowls and other open slopes, could become increasingly prone to larger avalanches.