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Deadly Avalanche Disaster Just Happened in the Italian Alps! FULL Evacuation Warning

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The Italian Alps are experiencing the

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deadest avalanche cycle in over a decade

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and it is happening 200 kilometers from

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the Winter Olympics.

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In the last 10 days, at least 75 people

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have died in avalanches across the Alps.

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That is 3/4 of what normally kills in an

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entire season. Over 250 people have been

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evacuated by helicopter from a single

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valley. A train has been knocked off its

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tracks. Villages have been cut off from

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the outside world. And the danger level

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has not dropped. But here is the detail

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that tells the real story. On Tuesday

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afternoon, skiers waiting in line at the

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Zarata chairlift in Valini looked up and

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saw a wall of white descending from

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3,773

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m. Children tried to ski uphill. Adults

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froze. Within seconds, every person in

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the frame disappeared into a cloud of

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snow. The footage went viral within

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hours, viewed millions of times. And the

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terrifying part is not the avalanche. It

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is the fact that just 2 days earlier on

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that same mountain side, three

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experienced skiers entered a cool and

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never came out alive. To understand how

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the Aosta Valley arrived at this moment,

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you have to watch the week accelerate.

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On February 10th, Fonda Zion Montana

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Sikura, Italy's Mountain Safety

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Institute, issued a bulletin declaring

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the snow pack had entered a critical

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phase. Fresh snowfall had been building

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since Tuesday with accumulations

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forecast to exceed 1 meter above 1,600

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m. By February 11th, weather stations at

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240 m near Cormeer recorded a staggering

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100 cm of new snow in just 48 hours.

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On February 12th, the Regional Avalanche

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Bureau raised the danger to level four

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out of five, officially classified as

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strong. Civil Protection issued an

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orange alert. Across the French border,

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Shamine shut down every high altitude

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ski area. The entire Paradiski resort,

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including La Plang and Lzarks, closed

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completely for the first time in 25

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years.

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In Tigas, authorities ordered thousands

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of residents and tourists to stay

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indoors overnight. No one was allowed to

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leave their hotel.

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And then it got worse. On February 13th,

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a 44year-old hotel worker from Milan was

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walking a snow-covered trail above

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Gresin Latrinete when the slope above

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him released without warning. He was

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swept under 1 and 1/2 m of snow. In the

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seconds before the weight crushed his

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chest, he pulled out his phone and

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dialed one2.

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Dispatchers heard two words before the

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line cut out. Stowondo.

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Rescue teams with avalanche dog Kmar

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worked for 3 hours through unstable

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terrain before finding him. His body

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temperature had dropped to 27° C. He

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survived.

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But that same Friday, three skiers in

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Valder did not. Two were British, one

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was French. All died under a snow pack

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that had been at level five, the maximum

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on the European scale just 24 hours

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earlier.

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Here is the problem that is not making

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headlines.

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The western Italian Alps, the region

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surrounding Mlancc do not sit on rock.

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The Iosta Valley is ringing by four of

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the highest massiffs in Europe. Grand

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Paradiso, Mlancc, Grand Comb Beine, and

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the Matterhorn.

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When northwesterly winds hit these

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peaks, they transport enormous volumes

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of snow over ridge lines and deposit it

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on leeward slopes, creating what

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avalanche scientists call wind slabs.

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These slabs are the loaded chambers of

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the mountain. They sit on top of older,

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weaker snow layers that formed weeks

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earlier. layers of fragile crystals that

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can fracture across hundreds of meters

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when disturbed.

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Federico Katana, spokesperson for

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Italy's Alpine Rescue Corps, told the

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Associated Press, that the core problem

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is persistent weak layers in the snow

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pack, often covered by fresh snow or

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wind. He said the dangerous points are

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many and difficult to identify, even for

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an expert. A single skier's weight can

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be enough to trigger a catastrophic

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release. But that was only half the

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problem. The Milan Cortina Winter

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Olympics opened on February 6th. Tens of

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thousands of visitors flooded the

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Italian Alps during the worst snowpack

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conditions in years.

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Katana warned reporters that snowstorms

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have attracted adventure seekers eager

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to take advantage of fresh slopes and

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that as a result, the number of

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accidents and fatalities has increased

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proportionally.

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Two forces were tightening around the

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Aosta Valley at the same time. The

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mountains were becoming more dangerous

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and the mountains were becoming more

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crowded.

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On Sunday, February 15th, at

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approximately 11 in the morning, the

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collision arrived. Three friends from

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Shamani, all experienced free riders,

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entered the Kulwir Vesses in Valveni

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above Corayure. It is one of the most

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popular off-piece routes at the foot of

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M Blanc and it was rated level four.

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Eyewitnesses at the base of the gully

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saw the moments before the slope

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released. Hugo Nuvil, 31, was found

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lifeless in the snow. A second skier

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died at hospital Perini in Aosta despite

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resuscitation. The third, Alexis Rasat,

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29, was buried for 40 minutes before

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being arirlifted to Molinet Hospital in

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Trin. He fought for a day, but he did

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not survive.

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15 rescuers, three K-9 units, and two

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helicopters worked the site. All three

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men, Hugo Newville, Quentyn Phipe, and

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Alexis Rasat were friends from France's

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Seavois region. They knew the mountain.

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The mountain did not care. And this is

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where it gets worse.

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The avalanches did not stop after the

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deaths. They accelerated.

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On the afternoon of the 15th, a slide

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buried regional road 24 in the Reams

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Valley. Villages were cut off. On

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February 16th, an avalanche in

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Switzerland derailed a passenger train

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near Gopenstein.

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29 people were on board. Five were

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injured.

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The rail line through the lodber

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corridor, a critical north south alpine

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link, was shut down.

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On February 17th, Martyra, roughly 100

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tourists, had come to the village of

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Rams Notradam at the foot of the Granta

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parade for a day of skiing. In the early

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afternoon, a massive avalanche buried

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the only road out. Helicopters began

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shuttling evacuees to the sports area at

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Imavvilles. The total reached 250 people

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airlifted from a single valley. 30 who

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could not return home that night slept

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at the Ramirez military barracks in

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Iosta. Three dead, 250 evacuated, 13

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killed in a single week earlier this

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month, a record.

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Snow depth exceeding 3 m in the upper

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valleys

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and approximately 75 avalanche deaths

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across the Alps this winter against an

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annual average of 100 with the season

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only half over. The official Aosta

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Valley avalanche bulletin published

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today, February 18th, rates the danger

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at level four. The tendency is listed in

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one word, constant. More snow is

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forecast over the next 48 hours.

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And forecasters have identified another

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threat moving in. A midweek warming

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trend could send melt water into those

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same weak layers, triggering a new type

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of release. wet snow avalanches that

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carry more mass and travel farther.

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The intraace Guardia Denansa is still

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investigating whether the fatal slide in

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the Kulwir Vesses was triggered by the

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skiers or released naturally.

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The red zone boundaries in the Reams

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Valley could still shift. And the

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paradox that keeps avalanche

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professionals awake at night is

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approaching.

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When the danger level eventually drops

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