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Displaying page 13 of photos 241 - 260 of 468
Southern Madison, 2025-01-05

Pit 2

44.95982, -111.09903

100cm snow depth

ECTP17. Failed on faceted layer 30cm above the ground. 

sugary fist snow 20-30cm above the ground; somewhat consolidated 4F storm slab 30-60cm; powder fist snow 60-95cm

Photo: R Cocco

Southern Madison, 2025-01-05

Toured up northwest of the bacon rind trailhead to the ridge. Did two pits, both with similar failures on the buried weak layer during ECT.

Pit 1

44.96190, -111.08941

95cm snow depth ECTN21. Failed on faceted snow that existed 23-35cm above the ground.

Photo:R Cocco

Lionhead Range, 2025-01-05

From IG Jan4, Photo: J. Urell

Link to Avalanche Details
Lionhead Range, 2025-01-05

From IG Message Jan 4."They happened today because I did not see the debris on way in". Photo: T. Urell

Link to Avalanche Details
Bridger Range, 2025-01-04

Photo: H Meyers 

Bridger Range, 2025-01-04

Photo: H Meyers

 

Bridger Range, 2025-01-04

Saw a small recent looking storm slab avalanche that appeared to be naturally triggered above the road on a south facing slope around 6000'.  It ran all the way across the slope ~30' wide and  ~4" deep within the recent snow.  The snow didn't move far enough to reach the road.  The slope was quite steep-- we didn't measure but I'd estimate 40*.

Photo: H Meyers

Link to Avalanche Details
Lionhead Range, 2025-01-04

Remote triggered this avalanche at Lionhead. We were snowmobiling to the left of where the avalanche occurred. No one was caught.

Coordinates: 44°43'36.8"N 111°19'05.0"W

Photo: Ben 

Link to Avalanche Details
Bridger Range, 2025-01-04

We triggered a wind slab. It propagated about 200 ft wide and was 3 ft at the deepest point. Interestingly on the edges and near the bottom (downhill side) of the slab it was only a few inches deep. It broke on the interface between the wind loaded snow and the light and dry snow we received a few days ago. Photo: A Shafer

Link to Avalanche Details
Bridger Range, 2025-01-04

We triggered a wind slab. It propagated about 200 ft wide and was 3 ft at the deepest point. Interestingly on the edges and near the bottom (downhill side) of the slab it was only a few inches deep. It broke on the interface between the wind loaded snow and the light and dry snow we received a few days ago. Photo: A Shafer

Link to Avalanche Details
Bridger Range, 2025-01-04

We triggered a wind slab. It propagated about 200 ft wide and was 3 ft at the deepest point. Interestingly on the edges and near the bottom (downhill side) of the slab it was only a few inches deep. It broke on the interface between the wind loaded snow and the light and dry snow we received a few days ago. Photo: A Shafer

Link to Avalanche Details
Northern Madison, 2025-01-04

From IG 1/3: “Buck ridge today. NE aspect. Probably 100’ wide and at least 3’ deep. Looked like it was triggered by a snowmobiler earlier in the day.” Photo: P Rockwell

Link to Avalanche Details
Northern Madison, 2025-01-04

From IG 1/3: “Buck ridge today. NE aspect. Probably 100’ wide and at least 3’ deep. Looked like it was triggered by a snowmobiler earlier in the day.” Photo: P Rockwell

Link to Avalanche Details
Cooke City, 2025-01-03

3-4 foot crown about 100 yards wide on East face of sheep mountain. Photo: Mike F

Link to Avalanche Details
Cooke City, 2025-01-03

3-4 foot crown about 100 yards wide on East face of sheep mountain. Photo: Mike F

 

Link to Avalanche Details
Southern Madison, 2025-01-03

Second photo of an avalanche likely triggered by a snowplow flinging snow onto the shoulder along 191 inside YNP. Not a dangerous avalanche but an indicator of dangerous conditions higher up in the mountains where the snow is deeper

 

Link to Avalanche Details
Southern Madison, 2025-01-03

Avalanche likely triggered by a snowplow flinging snow onto the shoulder along 191 inside YNP. Not a dangerous avalanche, but an indicator of dangerous conditions higher up in the mountains where the snow is deeper

 

Link to Avalanche Details
Southern Madison, 2025-01-03

Cut bank avalanche 3 Jan 25 along the Teepee Creek snowmobile trail 

 

Link to Avalanche Details
Cooke City, 2025-01-03

On Jan 2, 2025 we saw three avalanches just north of Daisy Pass and one on Henderson Mtn. The one on Henderson was difficult to see the crown, but we could see the debris. Two of the slides north of Daisy were 2-3' deep and 100-150' wide and ran into thick stands of trees, looked like thick soft slabs/drifts of recent snowfall. There were a lot of tracks from previous days nearby, but trigger in unknown. The other slide was 1-2' deep and 300-500' wide, soft slab of recent snow. Photo: GNFAC

Link to Avalanche Details
Cooke City, 2025-01-03

Jan 2, 2025 We dug a pit between Scotch Bonnet and Sheep Mtn. on a sw facing slope at 9,800'. HS was 135cm (4feet). We had ECTP12 and ECTP26, both on a layer at similar height as the surface hoar has been found (1.5-2 feet above the ground). The weak layer was mostly 2-3mm facets w/ small cups and some signs of surface hoar on top of a melt-freeze crust. Photo: GNFAC