Abstract

AbstractAt 1455 h on 18 January 1997, an airborne powder avalanche with a volume of about 3 × 106 m3 flowed along the tongue of Brenva glacier, high Aosta valley, on the southern flank of Val Veny, Italy It descended 2000 m and covered a distance of 5.5 km, with a rate of movement on the intermediate stretch of > 70 m s–1. It killed two skiers following a valley-bottom piste, damaged a hotel, destroyed a wide belt of woodland on the opposite slope and caused other minor damage. The avalanche occurred immediately after a large rockfall on the southern slope of the Sperone della Brenva (3567 m a.s.L). However, the relationship between the two events can only be considered indirect, since the main mass of the rockfall stopped at the base of the scar, on a large plateau on the glacier surface. The rockfall and subsequent shock caused the contemporaneous detachment of masses of ice and/or firn from hanging glaciers at the head of a nearby cirque, leading to the formation of the avalanche. The complex mechanism of detachment hypothesized was induced from available documentation and from in situ investigations. Its phases also coincide with seismograms recorded at a station 45 km from the avalanche area. Finally, a mathematical model of the avalanche was used to reconstruct its dynamics and path.

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