Failing on Facets

17th December 2022

Until yesterday the Lochaber hill were covered in a thin layer of snow. In the cold settled conditions this thin layer started to facet. Facetting is a process where the shape of the grains changes due to the presence of a strong temperature gradient. Without going into too many details, the result is that facets tend to be weak and poorly bonded. Last night and today heavy snow showers deposited layers of windslab on this layer of facets creating a very unstable combination. Although the areas of fresh windslab are not yet that extensive, there was loads of cracking and whumpfing of this windslab on low angled terrain. On steeper terrain, any windslab would be very prone on avalanching. More of the same expected tomorrow.

For those interested in reading a bit more a quick internet search found these two article on facets

https://www.mtavalanche.com/blog/facet-factory-introduction-snow-metamorphism

and

https://avalanche.org/avalanche-encyclopedia/faceted-snow/

There were some quite heavy snow showers such as this one just as I was leaving the gondola station.

Some patches of blue ski between showers.

A lone walker approaching summit plateau during one of the brighter periods.

The top of Coire an Lochan. There was plenty of spindrift pouring in during the day building cornices and depositing unstable windslab at the tops of the gullies. 

Lots of cracking in the windslab on easier angled terrain caused the the failure of a buried layer of facets. This indicative of a very unstable snowpack.

Comments on this post

Got something to say? Leave a comment

    Latest Lochaber Avalanche Report
    Archives
    Categories
    RSS Feed
    Keep up to date by subscribing to our RSS feed
Service funded by sportscotland
Forecast data supplied by the Met Office
SAIS Sponsors