Abstract

In order to study the formation of the initial failure leading to dry‐snow slab avalanche release, we performed loading experiments in a cold laboratory with natural samples including a layer of buried surface hoar. The experimental setup was such that the layered snow samples were loaded continuously for various tilt (slope) angles; loading rates varied between 1 and 20 Pa s−1. The stress at fracture decreased with increasing loading rate and increasing slope angle, i.e., increasing shear component of the load. The latter result means that the layer was stronger in compression than in shear which is attributed to the particularly anisotropic nature of layers of buried surface hoar. Particle image velocimetry revealed that almost 90% of the sample's global deformation was concentrated in the weak layer. For avalanche release our results imply that the shear component of deformation is of particular importance for failure initiation.

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