This strange avalanche in Yosemite NP almost looks like a waterfall:
Is this an avalanche?
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Re: Is this an avalanche?
Yes. It's not strange or unusual at all. That's what avalanches look like, especially when they spill over a cliff.
I'm old, slow and fat. Unfortunately, those are my good qualities.
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Re: Is this an avalanche?
I suspect the sound has a 30 second delay due to the distance. So the photographer may not have heard it until well after it started.
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Re: Is this an avalanche?
Interesting. I always imagined avalanches to occur where the landscape was covered with thick snow and then a slab broke off and slid. Here, the part that slid is probably out of sight but the rest of the landscape is largely bare rock and does not seem like it would have a huge load of snow to cause an avalanche. Speaking from no experience at all.
Re: Is this an avalanche?
In the spring, the snow melts out first at lower elevations and warmer aspects while persisting longer into the summer in the couloirs. What we're seeing here is a wet slide from higher elevations running into a lower area that has already melted out. The trigger is the warm temperatures and a snowpack that probably hasn't been freezing overnight. Once enough snow melts, the water acts as a lubricant for the remaining snow to slide. This is a very thick, wet, and heavy snow that is different from the powdery avalanches that occur in the winter. California experienced a record snowpack this year, so there will be a lot more of this type of activity than usual.
Re: Is this an avalanche?
Yes when they slide down on bare rock, they look like waterfalls.
Heres one I spotted in chile in torres del paine. Looks pretty similar, and it made a cool noise like that video too
Heres one I spotted in chile in torres del paine. Looks pretty similar, and it made a cool noise like that video too
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Re: Is this an avalanche?
One of my favorite videos was the one from Kyrgyzstan (a few years ago) that rapidly moved all the way down the mountain and over the observer. It's a testament to how much energy is inherent in the avalanche, but also how the ice-air suspended fluid literally flows across the landscape much further than you might initially expect. Careful out there!
Re: Is this an avalanche?
damn thats awesome.ECF55 wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 11:13 am One of my favorite videos was the one from Kyrgyzstan (a few years ago) that rapidly moved all the way down the mountain and over the observer. It's a testament to how much energy is inherent in the avalanche, but also how the ice-air suspended fluid literally flows across the landscape much further than you might initially expect. Careful out there!
After climbing a great hill, one only finds that there are many more hills to climb. -Nelson Mandela
Whenever I climb I am followed by a dog called Ego. -Nietzsche
Whenever I climb I am followed by a dog called Ego. -Nietzsche
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Re: Is this an avalanche?
I've seen many of those in the Alps when I was living there. Typically I would see and hear them from the towns at low elevations, where spring weather and gardening would be well underway and nobody would be thinking avalanche anymore. Of course we'd hear the boom with a delay and by the time we'd look up to the mountain, they had already been flowing for a while. Sometimes some would jump multiple cliffs.
Wet snow avalanches, that typically occur in warm and sunny weather.
Wet snow avalanches, that typically occur in warm and sunny weather.