Hazards
The craft of climbing has been developed to avoid three
main types of danger: the danger of things falling on the
climber (objective danger), the danger of the climber falling
and inclement weather. The things that may fall include rocks,
ice, snow, other climbers or their gear; the mountaineer may
fall from rocks, ice or snow, or into a crevasse. In all,
there are eight chief dangers: falling rocks, falling ice,
snow-avalanches, falls,the climber falling, falls from ice
slopes, falls down snow slopes, falls into crevasses and dangers
from weather. To select and follow a route using one's skills
and experience to mitigate these dangers is to exercise the
climber's craft.
Falling rocks
Every rock mountain is slowly disintegrating due to erosion,
the process being especially rapid above the snow-line. Rock
faces are constantly swept by falling stones, which are generally
possible to dodge. Falling rocks tend to form furrows in a
mountain face, and these furrows (couloirs) have to be ascended
with caution, their sides often being safe when the middle
is stoneswept. Rocks fall more frequently on some days than
on others, according to the recent weather. Ice formed during
the night may temporarily bind rocks to the face but warmth
of the day or direct sun exposure may easily dislodge these
rocks. Local experience is a valuable help on determining
typical rockfall on such routes.
The direction of the dip of rock strata often determines the
degree of danger on a particular face; the character of the
rock must also be considered. Where stones fall frequently
debris will be found below, whilst on snow slopes falling
stones cut furrows visible from a great distance. In planning
an ascent of a new peak mountaineers must look for such traces.
When falling stones get mixed in considerable quantity with
slushy snow or water a mud avalanche is formed (common in
the Himalaya). It is vital to avoid camping in their possible
line of fall.
Falling ice
The places where ice may fall can always be determined beforehand.
It falls in the broken parts of glaciers (seracs) and from
overhanging cornices formed on the crests of narrow ridges.
Large icicles are often formed on steep rockfaces, and these
fall frequently in fine weather following cold and stormy
days. They have to be avoided like falling stones. Seracs
are slow in formation, and slow in arriving (by glacier motion)
at a condition of unstable equilibrium. They generally fall
in or just after the hottest part of the day, and their debris
seldom goes far. A skillful and experienced ice-man will usually
devise a safe route through a most intricate ice-fall, but
such places should be avoided in the afternoon of a hot day.
Hanging glaciers (i.e. glaciers perched on steep slopes) often
discharge themselves over steep rock-faces, the snout breaking
off at intervals. They can always be detected by their debris
below. Their track should be avoided.
Avalanches
The avalanche is the most underestimated danger in the
mountains. People generally think that they will be able to
recognise the hazards and survive being caught. The truth
is a somewhat different story. Every year, 120 - 150 people
die in small avalanches in the Alps alone. The vast majority
are reasonably experienced male skiers aged 20-35 but also
include ski instructors and guides.[citation needed] There
is always a lot of pressure to risk a snow crossing. Turning
back takes a lot of extra time and effort, supreme leadership,
and most importantly there seldom is an avalanche to prove
the right decision was made. Making the decision to turn around
is especially hard if others are crossing the slope, but any
next person could become the trigger.
There are two types of avalanche:
1.The slab avalanche: This type of avalanche occurs
when a plate of snow breaks loose and starts sliding down;
these are the largest and most dangerous.
a) Hard slab avalanche - formed by hard-packed snow
in a cohesive slab. The slab will not break up easily as it
slides down the hill, resulting in large blocks tumbling down
the mountain.
b)Soft slab avalanche - formed again by a cohesive
layer of snow bonded together, the slab tends to break up
more easily.
2. The loose snow avalanche: This type of avalanche
is triggered by a small amount of moving snow that accumulates
into a big slide. Also known as a "wet slide or point
release" avalanche. This type of avalanche is deceptively
dangerous as it can still knock a climber or skier off their
feet and bury them, or sweep them over a cliff into a terrain
trap.
Dangerous slides are most likely to occur on the same slopes
preferred by many skiers: long and wide open, few trees or
large rocks, 30 to 45 degrees of angle, large load of fresh
snow, soon after a big storm, on a slope 'lee to the storm'.
Solar radiation can trigger slides as well. These will typically
be a point release or wet slough type of avalanche. The added
weight of the wet slide can trigger a slab avalanche. Ninety
percent of reported victims are caught in avalanches triggered
by themselves or others in their group.
When going off-piste or travelling in alpine terrain, parties
have a moral responsibility to always carry:
a) avalanche beacons
b) probes
c) shovels (retrieving victims with a shovel instead of your
hands is five times faster)
and to have had avalanche training! Paradoxically, expert
skiers who have avalanche training make up a large percentage
of avalanche fatalities; perhaps because they are the ones
more likely to ski in areas prone to avalanches.
Even with proper rescue equipment and training, there is a
one-in-five chance of dying if caught in a significant avalanche,
and only a 50/50 chance of being found alive if buried more
than a few minutes. The best solution is to learn how to avoid
risky conditions.
Falls from rocks
The skill of a rock climber is shown by one's choice of handhold
and foothold, and his adhesion to those one has chosen. Much
depends on a correct estimate of the firmness of the rock
where weight is to be thrown upon it. Many loose rocks are
quite firm enough to bear a person's weight, but experience
is needed to know which can be trusted, and skill is required
in transferring the weight to them without jerking. On rotten
rocks the rope must be handled with special care, lest it
should start loose stones on to the heads of those below.
Similar care must be given to handholds and footholds, for
the same reason. When a horizontal traverse has to be made
across very difficult rocks, a dangerous situation may arise
unless at both ends of the traverse there be firm positions.
Mutual assistance on hard rocks takes all manner of forms:
two, or even three, people climbing on one another's shoulders,
or using for foothold an ice axe propped up by others. The
great principle is that of co-operation, all the members of
the party climbing with reference to the others, and not as
independent units; each when moving must know what the climber
in front and the one behind are doing. After bad weather steep
rocks are often found covered with a veneer of ice (verglas),
which may even render them inaccessible. Crampons are useful
on such occasions.
Ice slopes
Mountaineers descending mixed rock, snow and ice slope in
winter High Tatras.For travel on slopes consisting of ice
or hard snow, crampons are a standard part of a mountaineer's
equipment. While step-cutting can sometimes be used on snow
slopes of moderate angle, this can be a slow and tiring process,
which does not provide the higher security of crampons. However,
in soft snow or powder, crampons are easily hampered by balling
of snow which reduce their effectiveness. In either case,
an ice axe not only assists with balance but provides the
climber with the possibility of self-arrest in case of a slip
or fall. On a true ice slope however, an ice axe is rarely
able to effect a self-arrest. As an additional safety precaution
on steep ice slopes, the climbing rope is attached to ice
screws buried into the ice.
True ice slopes are rare in Europe, though common in mountains
located in the tropics, where newly-fallen snow quickly thaws
on the surface and becomes sodden below, so that the next
night's frost turns the whole mass into a sheet of semi-solid
ice.
Snow slopes
Part of the Haute Route on French, Swiss border; two alpinists
can be seen following the trail in the snow.Snow slopes are
very common, and usually easy to ascend. At the foot of a
snow or ice slope is generally a big crevasse, called a bergschrund,
where the final slope of the mountain rises from a snow-field
or glacier. Such bergschrunds are generally too wide to be
stepped across, and must be crossed by a snow bridge, which
needs careful testing and a painstaking use of the rope. A
steep snow slope in bad condition may be dangerous, as the
whole body of snow may start as an avalanche. Such slopes
are less dangerous if ascended directly than obliquely, for
an oblique or horizontal track cuts them across and facilitates
movement of the mass. New snow lying on ice is especially
dangerous. Experience is needed for deciding on the advisability
of advancing over snow in doubtful condition. Snow on rocks
is usually rotten unless it is thick; snow on snow is likely
to be sound. A day or two of fine weather will usually bring
new snow into sound condition. Snow cannot lie at a very steep
angle, though it often deceives the eye as to its slope. Snow
slopes seldom exceed 40°. Ice slopes may be much steeper.
Snow slopes in early morning are usually hard and safe, but
the same in the afternoon are quite soft and possibly dangerous;
hence the advantage of an early start.
Crevasses
Crevasses are the slits or deep chasms formed in the substance
of a glacier as it passes over an uneven bed. They may be
open or hidden. In the lower part of a glacier the crevasses
are open. Above the snow-line they are frequently hidden by
arched-over accumulations of winter snow. The detection of
hidden crevasses requires care and experience. After a fresh
fall of snow they can only be detected by sounding with the
pole of the ice axe, or by looking to right and left where
the open extension of a partially hidden crevasse may be obvious.
The safeguard against accident is the rope, and no one should
ever cross a snow-covered glacier unless roped to one, or
even better to two companions. Anyone venturing onto crevasses
should be trained in crevasse rescue.
Weather
The primary dangers caused by bad weather centre around
the changes it causes in snow and rock conditions, making
movement suddenly much more arduous and hazardous than under
normal circumstances.
Poor visibility in blizzard conditions.Whiteouts make it difficult
to retrace a route while rain may prevent taking the easiest
line only determined as such under dry conditions. In a storm
the mountaineer who uses a compass for guidance has a great
advantage over a merely empirical observer. In large snow-fields
it is, of course, easier to go wrong than on rocks, but intelligence
and experience are the best guides in safely navigating objective
hazards.
Summer thunderstorms may produce intense lightning which are
attracted to the highest points on the ground. If a climber
happens to be standing on or near the summit, they may now
in fact be the highest point. There are many cases where people
have been struck by lightning while climbing mountains. In
most mountainous regions, local storms develop by late morning
and early afternoon. Many climbers will often begin ascents
"alpine style"; that is before or by first light
so as to be on the way down when storms are intensifying in
activity and lightning and other weather hazards are a distinct
threat to safety.
Altitude
Rapid ascent can lead to altitude sickness. The best treatment
is to descend immediately. The climber's motto at high altitude
is "climb high, sleep low", referring to the regimen
of climbing higher to acclimatize but returning to lower elevation
to sleep. In the South American Andes, the chewing of coca
leaves has been traditionally used to treat altitude sickness
symptoms.
Common symptoms of altitude sickness include severe headache,
sleep problems, nausea, lack of appetite, lethargy and body
ache. Mountain sickness may progress to HACE (High Altitude
Cerebral Edema) and HAPE (High Altitude Pulmonary Edema),
both of which can be fatal within 24 hours.
In high mountains, atmospheric pressure is lower and this
means that less oxygen is available to breathe. This is the
underlying cause of altitude sickness. Everyone needs to acclimatize,
even exceptional mountaineers that have been to high altitude
before. Generally speaking, mountaineers start using bottled
oxygen when they climb above 7,000 m. Exceptional mountaineers
have climbed 8000-meter peaks (including Everest) without
oxygen, almost always with a carefully planned program of
acclimatization.
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