22-23

On May 14 and 15 we saw crowns and debris of wet slabs that ran naturally over the past couple weeks.

Scotch Bonnet, S aspect, 9800'; Sheep Mtn. SW aspect, 9800'; Crown Butte, SE aspect, 10000'.

Hard to say exactly when they all occurred. The slides on Scotch Bonnet and Sheep appeared slightly fresher, but could have been a week old.

Avalanche Details: Wet slab activity near Cooke
Cooke City, 2023-05-19

On May 14 and 15 we saw crowns and debris of wet slabs that ran naturally over the past couple weeks.

Scotch Bonnet, S aspect, 9800'; Sheep Mtn. SW aspect, 9800'; Crown Butte, SE aspect, 10000'.

Hard to say exactly when they all occurred. The slides on Scotch Bonnet and Sheep appeared slightly fresher, but could have been a week old.

Cooke City, 2023-05-19

On May 14 and 15 we saw crowns and debris of wet slabs that ran naturally over the past couple weeks.

Scotch Bonnet, S aspect, 9800'; Sheep Mtn. SW aspect, 9800'; Crown Butte, SE aspect, 10000'.

Hard to say exactly when they all occurred. The slides on Scotch Bonnet and Sheep appeared slightly fresher, but could have been a week old.

Avalanche Details: Wet slab activity near Cooke
Cooke City, 2023-05-19

Photos of wet slab activity near Cooke

Date
Activity
Skiing
Snowmobiling

On May 14 and 15 we saw crowns and debris of wet slabs that ran naturally over the past couple weeks.

Scotch Bonnet, S aspect, 9800'; Sheep Mtn. SW aspect, 9800'; Crown Butte, SE aspect, 10000'.

Hard to say exactly when they all occurred. The slides on Scotch Bonnet and Sheep appeared slightly fresher, but could have been a week old.

Region
Cooke City
Location (from list)
Scotch Bonnet
Observer Name
Alex Marienthal

Skier triggered slide Pioneer Mountains

Date
Activity
Skiing

Skier triggered slide in a steep, north facing couloir in the Torrey Peak cirque. Triggered with a ski cut, no one was caught. Slide failed on interface between the old snow surface and 4” of consolidated graupel that fell 5/11. Prior to skiing this chute, we had not observed any avalanche activity failing on this same interface. 

Region
Dillon Area
Location (from list)
East Pioneer Mountains

Large Natural Wet Avalanche on Wilson Pk

Wilson Peak
Northern Madison
Code
WS-N-R3-D4-O
Elevation
10000
Aspect
S
Latitude
45.31790
Longitude
-111.33600
Notes

Natural R3-4, D4 ripped out a large chunk of the south face of Wilson during the last warm period I would assume. Debris everywhere and one large boat-sized pile even scoured a path further down than the rest of the debris. Looked to be a mix of wet loose and wet slab release from high up. Alpha angle at the bottom of the debris was 25 degrees

Number of slides
1
Number caught
0
Number buried
0
Avalanche Type
Wet slab avalanche
Trigger
Natural trigger
R size
3
D size
4
Bed Surface
O - Old snow
Problem Type
Wet Snow
Snow Observation Source
Slab Thickness units
centimeters
Single / Multiple / Red Flag
Single Avalanche
Advisory Year

From obs 5/7/23: "Natural R3-4, D4 ripped out a large chunk of the south face of Wilson during the last warm period I would assume. Debris everywhere and one large boat-sized pile even scoured a path further down than the rest of the debris. Looked to be a mix of wet loose and wet slab release from high up. Alpha angle at the bottom of the debris was 25 degrees" Photo: C. Ellingson

Northern Madison, 2023-05-09

From obs 5/7/23: "Natural R3-4, D4 ripped out a large chunk of the south face of Wilson during the last warm period I would assume. Debris everywhere and one large boat-sized pile even scoured a path further down than the rest of the debris. Looked to be a mix of wet loose and wet slab release from high up. Alpha angle at the bottom of the debris was 25 degrees" Photo: C. Ellingson

Northern Madison, 2023-05-09

From obs 5/7/23: "Natural R3-4, D4 ripped out a large chunk of the south face of Wilson during the last warm period I would assume. Debris everywhere and one large boat-sized pile even scoured a path further down than the rest of the debris. Looked to be a mix of wet loose and wet slab release from high up. Alpha angle at the bottom of the debris was 25 degrees" Photo: C. Ellingson

Northern Madison, 2023-05-09