Deadly Avalanche Disaster Just Happened in the Italian Alps! FULL Evacuation Warning
全トランスクリプト
The Italian Alps are experiencing the
deadest avalanche cycle in over a decade
and it is happening 200 kilometers from
the Winter Olympics.
In the last 10 days, at least 75 people
have died in avalanches across the Alps.
That is 3/4 of what normally kills in an
entire season. Over 250 people have been
evacuated by helicopter from a single
valley. A train has been knocked off its
tracks. Villages have been cut off from
the outside world. And the danger level
has not dropped. But here is the detail
that tells the real story. On Tuesday
afternoon, skiers waiting in line at the
Zarata chairlift in Valini looked up and
saw a wall of white descending from
3,773
m. Children tried to ski uphill. Adults
froze. Within seconds, every person in
the frame disappeared into a cloud of
snow. The footage went viral within
hours, viewed millions of times. And the
terrifying part is not the avalanche. It
is the fact that just 2 days earlier on
that same mountain side, three
experienced skiers entered a cool and
never came out alive. To understand how
the Aosta Valley arrived at this moment,
you have to watch the week accelerate.
On February 10th, Fonda Zion Montana
Sikura, Italy's Mountain Safety
Institute, issued a bulletin declaring
the snow pack had entered a critical
phase. Fresh snowfall had been building
since Tuesday with accumulations
forecast to exceed 1 meter above 1,600
m. By February 11th, weather stations at
240 m near Cormeer recorded a staggering
100 cm of new snow in just 48 hours.
On February 12th, the Regional Avalanche
Bureau raised the danger to level four
out of five, officially classified as
strong. Civil Protection issued an
orange alert. Across the French border,
Shamine shut down every high altitude
ski area. The entire Paradiski resort,
including La Plang and Lzarks, closed
completely for the first time in 25
years.
In Tigas, authorities ordered thousands
of residents and tourists to stay
indoors overnight. No one was allowed to
leave their hotel.
And then it got worse. On February 13th,
a 44year-old hotel worker from Milan was
walking a snow-covered trail above
Gresin Latrinete when the slope above
him released without warning. He was
swept under 1 and 1/2 m of snow. In the
seconds before the weight crushed his
chest, he pulled out his phone and
dialed one2.
Dispatchers heard two words before the
line cut out. Stowondo.
Rescue teams with avalanche dog Kmar
worked for 3 hours through unstable
terrain before finding him. His body
temperature had dropped to 27° C. He
survived.
But that same Friday, three skiers in
Valder did not. Two were British, one
was French. All died under a snow pack
that had been at level five, the maximum
on the European scale just 24 hours
earlier.
Here is the problem that is not making
headlines.
The western Italian Alps, the region
surrounding Mlancc do not sit on rock.
The Iosta Valley is ringing by four of
the highest massiffs in Europe. Grand
Paradiso, Mlancc, Grand Comb Beine, and
the Matterhorn.
When northwesterly winds hit these
peaks, they transport enormous volumes
of snow over ridge lines and deposit it
on leeward slopes, creating what
avalanche scientists call wind slabs.
These slabs are the loaded chambers of
the mountain. They sit on top of older,
weaker snow layers that formed weeks
earlier. layers of fragile crystals that
can fracture across hundreds of meters
when disturbed.
Federico Katana, spokesperson for
Italy's Alpine Rescue Corps, told the
Associated Press, that the core problem
is persistent weak layers in the snow
pack, often covered by fresh snow or
wind. He said the dangerous points are
many and difficult to identify, even for
an expert. A single skier's weight can
be enough to trigger a catastrophic
release. But that was only half the
problem. The Milan Cortina Winter
Olympics opened on February 6th. Tens of
thousands of visitors flooded the
Italian Alps during the worst snowpack
conditions in years.
Katana warned reporters that snowstorms
have attracted adventure seekers eager
to take advantage of fresh slopes and
that as a result, the number of
accidents and fatalities has increased
proportionally.
Two forces were tightening around the
Aosta Valley at the same time. The
mountains were becoming more dangerous
and the mountains were becoming more
crowded.
On Sunday, February 15th, at
approximately 11 in the morning, the
collision arrived. Three friends from
Shamani, all experienced free riders,
entered the Kulwir Vesses in Valveni
above Corayure. It is one of the most
popular off-piece routes at the foot of
M Blanc and it was rated level four.
Eyewitnesses at the base of the gully
saw the moments before the slope
released. Hugo Nuvil, 31, was found
lifeless in the snow. A second skier
died at hospital Perini in Aosta despite
resuscitation. The third, Alexis Rasat,
29, was buried for 40 minutes before
being arirlifted to Molinet Hospital in
Trin. He fought for a day, but he did
not survive.
15 rescuers, three K-9 units, and two
helicopters worked the site. All three
men, Hugo Newville, Quentyn Phipe, and
Alexis Rasat were friends from France's
Seavois region. They knew the mountain.
The mountain did not care. And this is
where it gets worse.
The avalanches did not stop after the
deaths. They accelerated.
On the afternoon of the 15th, a slide
buried regional road 24 in the Reams
Valley. Villages were cut off. On
February 16th, an avalanche in
Switzerland derailed a passenger train
near Gopenstein.
29 people were on board. Five were
injured.
The rail line through the lodber
corridor, a critical north south alpine
link, was shut down.
On February 17th, Martyra, roughly 100
tourists, had come to the village of
Rams Notradam at the foot of the Granta
parade for a day of skiing. In the early
afternoon, a massive avalanche buried
the only road out. Helicopters began
shuttling evacuees to the sports area at
Imavvilles. The total reached 250 people
airlifted from a single valley. 30 who
could not return home that night slept
at the Ramirez military barracks in
Iosta. Three dead, 250 evacuated, 13
killed in a single week earlier this
month, a record.
Snow depth exceeding 3 m in the upper
valleys
and approximately 75 avalanche deaths
across the Alps this winter against an
annual average of 100 with the season
only half over. The official Aosta
Valley avalanche bulletin published
today, February 18th, rates the danger
at level four. The tendency is listed in
one word, constant. More snow is
forecast over the next 48 hours.
And forecasters have identified another
threat moving in. A midweek warming
trend could send melt water into those
same weak layers, triggering a new type
of release. wet snow avalanches that
carry more mass and travel farther.
The intraace Guardia Denansa is still
investigating whether the fatal slide in
the Kulwir Vesses was triggered by the
skiers or released naturally.
The red zone boundaries in the Reams
Valley could still shift. And the
paradox that keeps avalanche
professionals awake at night is
approaching.
When the danger level eventually drops
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