The planet’sย warming, and the Himalayas, of course,ย areย not exempt. One result of thoseย rising temperatures could beย increased avalanche risk, according toย a new studyย published last week, reports outsideonline.com.
The researchers focused on the Western Himalaya, a region that’s seen moreย and farther-reaching slides in the last 50 years.
“In many slopes in the Himalayas, the snow is not a limiting factor,ย but the warmer temperatures are affecting the snow pack stability,” saysย Juan Antonio Ballesteros-Cรกnovas, lead author and scientist at the Institute for Environmental Sciences at the University of Geneva, Switzerland.
In other words, the volume of snow has remained relatively constant, despite warming. It’s the changingย air temperature that causes a problem: as the days get warmer earlier in the year, the snowpack destabilizes, leading to wetter, more frequent slides inย late winter and early spring.
Scientists have seen similar patterns in the Rocky Mountains and the French Alps. At the same time, recreation in these areasย has grown, making more people vulnerable to fickle alpine conditions; in the U.S., avalanche deaths are increasing.
Avalanches are complicated, often-spontaneous events affected by many factors, such as snow type, weather, and the shape and angle of the underlying slope. That makes them hard to study. But, luckily for the scientists, avalanches leave a record in trees, through scars, stumps, and slanted trunks. The scientists analyzed 144 trees on the slope, making observations of damages and dating scars using their rings.ย Using this process, they constructed an avalanche history dating back over 150 years. โBy doing this, we are sure that the frequency and extension of snow avalanches in recent decadesย has been much larger than previously,โ saysย Ballesteros-Cรกnovas.
Over the entire period, the area averaged 0.24 avalanches per year. But, in recent decades, starting in the 1970s, the average was as high as 0.875 per year. A greater area of trees was injured in more recent avalanches, indicating that not only are avalanches becoming more frequent, but they’re also covering more ground.
Ballesteros-Cรกnovasย says there’s work to be done before it’s possible to understand how the results apply to other areas. Still, heย thinks it’s important for alpine skiers and mountaineersย to be aware of these results:
“Warmer temperatures in spring, after a good winter, can be dangerous.”