Incident
Summaries
For 2002-2003 Season
11-29-2002: (Excerpted from
Snowranger Chris Joosen's report) Seven climbers were involved in a
climber triggered class 2 slab avalanche in Tuckerman Ravine. Four
individuals were buried, two partially and two completely. One of the
partially buried climbers (Matt) had only his forearm and hand above
the surface and the other (Richard C.) had some of his pack and
shoulder exposed. The two complete burials both resulted in
fatalities. The first fatal recovery (Scott, 32 yrs) was 0.6 meters
below the surface with his feet approximately 1 meter deep. The second
deceased (Tom B., 46 yrs), and last of the four recovered, was found
0.95 meters deep in a horizontal prone position. The crown line was
estimated at 45 meters across, 0.3-0.45 meters deep, and on a slope
averaging roughly 43 degrees. The distance is unclear, but the crown
was estimated to be 10 meters above the highest climber. Slope failure
occurred when the highest climber was on the steepest part of the Lip
at roughly 47 degrees. The slide ran approximately 305 meters and left
a debris field 122 meters by 17 meters and in pockets up to 3.65
meters deep. Matt was 7.6 meters from the toe of the debris, Tom B.
was 21.6 meters, Scott 29.3 meters, and Richard C. 38.4 meters from
the terminal end. They were almost in a straight line and very close
to the center, width-wise, of the debris field.
During the early morning hours on Friday November
29th multiple parties prepared to go ice and snow climbing in
Tuckerman Ravine. Tom S. and his partner Tony were the first two in
the Ravine at roughly 10 am to begin climbing the open book,
which is directly under the Lip. The Lip is often used as an easy exit
out of the Ravine compared to the ice pitches towards the center
Headwall. Tom reached the top of the open book in one
pitch and began to bring Tony up, belaying off of three ice screws. At
the same time three soloists, Tom B., Matt, and Richard C. approached
the bottom of the open book. Matt climbed around the right
side of Tom S. and Tony while Tom B. and Richard C. climbed on the
left.
All five climbers were at the top of the first
pitch at approximately the same time when the three soloists pushed on
ahead. Tom S. and Tony decided they didnt like all this activity
above them and decided to bail out by traversing right and ultimately
to walk down and around back to the floor of the Ravine. According to
Tom S. the three soloists were beginning to touch off surface
slides which were small loose snow sluffs. The upper three were
close together, near the bottom of the northern end of the Tuckerman
Headwall, when Tom B. went left for some low angle water ice and was
knocked off by a small sluff falling about 30.5 to 45.7 meters.
In the mean time Scott and his partner Richard D.
approached the bottom of the open book and were preparing
to suit up for a roped climb where the others ventured earlier. Tom B.
began traversing above Tom S. heading for low angled exit. Tom S. was
getting nervous about the snow conditions above him and asked Tom B.
to hold tight for a minute until Tony was ready to belay him up. Tom
B. agreed to wait. Up above, Richard C. had climbed out of Matts
view, to move up into the Lip. Matt was about 15 meters behind,
following him toward the horizon.

(1-Tom S., 2-Tony, 3-Tom B., 4-Matt, 5-Richard C.,
6-Richard D., 7-Scott)
Jeff, one of the AMC Tuckerman Caretakers, had been
watching the situation unfold from the floor of the Ravine with his
climbing partner Dave. They were assessing where they could go safely
to avoid the crowds, and were watching the seven climbers
on the right side of the Ravine and four more near the center bowl. It
was 11:25 am. They watched the top climber, Richard C. start to fall
and quickly realized he was caught in an avalanche that was now
heading for all the climbers below. Matt was quickly swept up as was
Tom B. at midslope. Tom S. heard avalanche! from above and
quickly hunkered against his anchor as the snow hit him and pulled his
cordelette tight against three screws. Richard D. at the bottom was up
close against the steep ice as the snow shot over his head leaving him
essentially untouched. Scott, being away from the ice, took the force
of the avalanche.
When the avalanche stopped, Richard D., Tom S. and
Tony were still on the route unhurt and began making their way down to
the debris pile. Jeff and Dave had initially run back down the trail
towards Hermit Lake to put more distance between themselves and the
runout zone. They quickly headed back about 60 meters to the debris
pile and radioed the AMC Pinkham Notch Visitor Center on Rt. 16. I was
at the Visitor Center, 3 miles from the accident, and heard the
initial radio call from Jeff. We spoke and discussed scene safety and
avalanche safety gear for those on site. Jeff and Dave were the only
people on scene who were wearing beacons and carrying probes and a
shovel. The AMC front desk manager and I had a quick conversation
about contacting NH Fish and Game, putting a National Guard helicopter
on standby and call outs for volunteer SAR groups. Phone calls
and beeper messages went out for AMC, MRS, and AVSAR team members.

(1-Tom S., 2-Tony, 3-Tom B., 4-Matt, 5-Richard C.,
6-Richard D., 7-Scott)
Jeff sent bystanders to a first aid and avalanche
cache 5 minutes down the trail to bring up probes to the debris as
none of the buried individuals were wearing avalanche beacons. The two
partial buried, Matt and Richard C., were uncovered within several
minutes. Matt had no injuries and began participating in the rescue.
Richard C. appeared to have significant rib and shoulder injuries. He
was treated on scene and assisted down the trail to Hermit Lake.
Richard D. said Scott hadnt tied into their rope before the
accident and was holding it in his hand. The rope, which was visible,
was determined to be the best clue for either victim still buried so
it was followed under the snow hoping they would find Scott. They
found him using this technique, under 0.6 to 0.9 meters of debris
within 20-25 minutes after the avalanche. I headed up the Sherburne
ski trail on snowmobile with our avalanche dog Cutler. Upon reaching
Hermit Lake I collected gear to head into the Ravine. On the way into
the Ravine I passed Richard C. struggling out of the ravine with
assistance. Five minutes later I came across rescuers (EMTs)
taking Scott out by sled. I spoke with them for 2 minutes about the
scene above and Scotts condition. According to the EMTs
they did CPR for about 20 minutes; he did not have an ice mask when
found. I headed into the Bowl and reached the debris at approximately
12:35. Seventy minutes had passed since the avalanche accident
occurred.
I spoke to Jeff briefly to get an update on the
situation. They randomly probed likely burial areas with no results. A
probeline was begun from the toe and was about 75 % up the debris when
I arrived. Jeff wasnt completely confident that he could rule
out the area covered as probed well. I began working Cutler at roughly
12:40-12:45; he worked for about 10-15 minutes and found a buried
climbing helmet. At that point I began another organized probe line
from the toe. We moved about 4 meters up from the debris toe. I handed
probeline responsibility back over to Jeff and began working Cutler
again. Ten minutes later, at 13:11 the line found Tom B. 21.6 meters
from the toe of the debris. He was under .95 meters of debris. He was
pulseless and breathless, had no ice mask, and had obvious head and
neck injuries.
Brief Analysis
Some of the climbers interviewed said they had seen
the avalanche advisory at Pinkham Notch and then at Hermit Lake at the
base of the Ravine. The bulletin discussed concern over E and SE
facing aspects with some strong lee areas on the upper end of Moderate
heading towards Considerable. Due to the best ice and most popular
routes being on these aspects, the majority of the climbers in the
Ravine that morning were concentrated in this area. Of the 11 climbing
at the time of the accident, 7 were on the same route in 3 groups one
over another in an area of the most potential instability. The major
rules of safe travel in avalanche terrain were broken. Always
travel one at a time in suspect terrain while others in a safe area
and Never travel over or under another person without their
permission are two tenants that were broken and should be
strictly adhered to in avalanche terrain. Of the 11 individuals
climbing in the Ravine at the time of the accident no one had
avalanche safety equipment, i.e., beacon, probe, or shovel. Tom S. and
Tony made good decisions once increased hazards were presented. They
were the first up climbing so they werent under another group
and they were roped using ice screws which in a sense allows only one
to travel on a suspect slope. Although this is stretching this rule a
bit the rope saved Tom S. from injury or death as his 3 screws held
him while the avalanche passed over him. Once more climbers entered
the scene and Tom S. and Tony witnessed more instability, the light
sluffing from the three soloists climbing above them, they decided to
descend. Tom B., one of the 3 above, tumbled down slope approximately
30.5-45.7 meters which was a good indication of the lower slope
stability. However, these slopes are lower angle thus are not as
protected from NW winds, from the preceding 2 days, as the steeper E,
ESE, SE pocket that avalanched just 75 meters away.
Several factors led to the accident causing injury
and loss of life. Primarily, it was a case of broken travel rules in
avalanche terrain, overlooking Mother Natures clues in the field
concerning snowpack stability, and perhaps not fully heeding the
avalanche forecast discussing the aspects to watch closely. Snowpack
structure in the crown area was typical for the Mt. Washington area.
Several inches of snow were brought in on the 27th and 28th by
moderate to high NW winds. Into the 29th, winds shifted to the W which
began the predominate loading on E aspects. However, we know that NW
winds dont load new snow exclusively on SE facing slopes, but
would be the predominate aspect of concern. In this case, 2 days of NW
winds may have made enough difference to create more instability on
this SE lee pocket. No unusual or complex weak layers were present; it
was new soft slab over an ice layer. This interface between an ice or
crust layer and new slab is one of the most common weaknesses in our
forecast area resulting in slope failure. It is unclear if shear
failure occurred on the interface between the ice and the new snow or
just above. Both scenarios are commonly found depending on many
factors. Temperature during new snowfall and duration of contact
between the slab and ice layer before failure play large roles where
shear failure occurs. Safe entry into the area for a crown line
profile was not possible due to new snow and loading after the
incident so highly accurate data is not available of the exact
weakness resulting in failure.
The bulletin the day before the accident discussed
weather and snow stability as did the bulletin the morning of the
accident. The following is the specific sections of the avalanche
bulletin from 11/29/03 discussing the situation in the Ravine that day
and future trends. The bulletin was posted at the roadside visitor
center as well as at Hermit Lake. All those climbing in the Ravine
passed at least one of these 2 locations before heading into
Tuckerman.
TUCKERMAN AND HUNTINGTON RAVINES CURRENTLY HAVE
MODERATE AVALANCHE DANGER. Natural avalanches are unlikely and human
triggered avalanches are possible on steep snow covered open slopes
and gullies. Be cautious in steep terrain. The summit has received
under an inch of new snow over the past 24 hours with very cold
temperatures matching the all time low for Thanksgiving of -14 degrees
F. NW winds and very light snow have made for ideal conditions for new
loading on SE and E aspects and the cross loading of others. With even
a couple inches of snow significant slabs can form when ideal
densities and winds exist. In addition snow is being deposited on an
ice crust that high winds swept clean in some locations during last
weekends storm. Take this into account when determining stability with
any new snow over the next several days. New snow falling on an ice
crust won't bond nearly as well as those with snow deposits without a
crust. This may cause over confident stability assessments if they are
done in areas on new snow verses the ice crust. This spatial
variability will be something to keep on the forefront of decision
making over the next week. You may find pockets of instability on the
high Moderate end approaching Considerable particularly in strong lee
areas of NW and W winds. New loading into tomorrow may push some
pockets to Considerable so keep an eye on the weather and its' effect
on snow stability through the weekend. Snow showers are in the
National Weather Service forecast for the next 8 days! We are
expecting snow showers today and this evening with 2-5 inches possible
into the beginning of the weekend. Expect an elevated avalanche danger
over Saturday and Sunday. I expect either a Moderate or perhaps
Considerable rating to prevail. So watch for new bulletins discussing
any change in the daily rating. Remember if the snowfield is large
enough to ski, climb, or recreate on it's large enough to avalanche.
AS ALWAYS, THIS ADVISORY IS ONE MORE TOOL TO HELP
YOU MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS IN AVALANCHE TERRAIN. It should be used
along with your own snow stability assessments, knowledge of safe
travel techniques, skill in mountain weather's effect on the snowpack,
and avalanche rescue.
2-2-2003: The victim and partner were
camping out on the Summit cone when she became ill during the night.
The next day they determined she was too weak to descend on her own
and around 9:15 am they called 911 on their cell phone requesting
assistance. Due to incorrect information and weather conditions,
searchers did not find the two until about 1:45 pm. The victim was
assisted down the Lion Head Winter Route and was then transported to
Pinkham by the USFS snowcat. The rescue took 8 people and 9 hours to
complete. Cell phones should not be relied upon when in the mountains.
Rescuers were not able to contact the victims cell phone and the
location information that was given was not correct so it took hours
to find the victims.
2-19-2003: The victim took at 20-30
foot fall in Central Gully and suffered a possible sprained/broken
ankle. He and his two partners self rescued to the Harvard Cabin. The
victim was put in a litter from the Lion Head first aid cache by the
Caretaker and sledded down the Tuckerman Ravine trail to Pinkham. The
rescue took 3 people approximately 4 hours.
2-24-2003: The victim was skiing the
Sherburne Ski Trail when he fell and suffered a possible dislocated
shoulder. He was attended to by his group and self evacuated to
Pinkham then to Androscoggin Valley Hospital.
3-8-2003: The victim was skiing when
she hit a chunk of avalanche debris" on the floor of the
ravine and tumbled. She was assisted by another person in the ravine
who called for help. Her chief complaints were lower back, neck and
shoulder pain so she was immobilized on a backboard, transferred to a
litter and lowered down the Little Headwall. From there she was
transported in the USFS snowcat to Pinkham and taken to the hospital
by ambulance. This rescue took 10 people about 2 hours to complete.
3-9-2003: The victim was staying at
Hermit Lake when he felt ill. He was transported to Pinkham via the
USFS snowcat. This rescue took 1 person 1 hour.
3-24-2003: The victim, tenting outside
the Harvard Cabin, became ill in the middle of the night. His pulse
rate was elevated and he was very weak and nauseous. He was
transported to Pinkham via a USFS snowmobile and went by ambulance to
the hospital. This rescue took one person 1 hour.
4-17-2003: The victim was skiing the
Chute in the late afternoon when he fell, tumbling about 400'. He
suffered multiple bruises and abrasions to his face and arms. He was
assisted by his friends to Hermit Lake where he was attended to by the
Caretaker. The victim was assisted out to Pinkham by his two friends.
4-25-2003: The victim was skiing the
Chute when he fell approximately 200' and suffered a knee injury. He
was attended to by an EMT in the ravine and assisted to Hermit Lake.
His knee was resplinted by a USFS Snow Ranger allowing him to self
evacuate to Pinkham.
5-3-2003: The victim was hiking up the
Right Gully wearing crampons (and had no ice axe) when he fell. He
caught his crampon in the fall twisting his ankle. He was lowered down
the slope on a 300' static rope by the MWVSP and a USFS Snow Ranger
and put in a litter on the floor of the ravine. He was then carried
down to Pinkham by a group of volunteers and taken by ambulance to the
hospital. This rescue took 24 people and 4 hours (46.5 person hours)
to complete. The victim reported back that he had broken his ankle and
had a plate and 5 screws installed.
5-3-2003: The victim was sledding on
an inner-tube on the floor of the ravine. He was travelling at a high
rate of speed when his tube turned him around backwards and he slammed
into a chunk of ice at a high rate of speed. The impact with the ice
sent him flying and he landed facedown, approximately 10' downhill.
The victim was initially unresponsive and had a compromised airway, he
was backboarded, given oxygen and put in a litter. He was carried to
Pinkham by a group of volunteers and taken to the hospital by
ambulance. During the rescue the patient remained stable but vomited
numerous times during the carry out. This rescue took 32 people about
4.5 hours (118 person hours) to complete. It was reported back that
the victim suffered a couple of broken ribs and a concussion.
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