Unofficial Networks: Avalanche Course Creates Tiny Model Avalanche In The Classroom

Outdoor education professor Ben Mirkin shared a video showing an in-class miniature avalanche demonstration

Snow blankets the high terrain as vibrant fall colors cover the green mountains of Vermont on Oct. 16, 2024.

Vermont State University outdoor education professor Ben Mirkin shared an interesting video to social media demonstrating slope angles and propagation in avalanches with a little in-class experiment. They created a snow pack model using layers of flour, sugar, and more flower, then tipped the model until a miniature avalanche occurred.

Obviously this is not a 100% accurate avalanche and it should not be thought of as “this is how avalanches happen”, but it is a neat little in-home experiment to watch. It’s like a model volcano!

In this case the “avalanche” occurred right around 41°, well within the slope angle range for most avalanches. The most common slope angles for avalanches sit between 30° and 45°, though they are possible both above and below that range.

Read the full story from Unofficial Networks here.