Facets and crusts in Glacier

Location Name: 
Forecaster Observation - Mt. Brown, GNP
Observation date: 
Tuesday, January 15, 2019 - 15:45

Is this an Avalanche Observation: 
No
Observation made by: Forecaster

Location

Tabs

Quick Observation

Enjoyed the tail end of the inversion with a day off tour in the land of well-maintained trails. Objectives were to soak up some sun and observe the snow surface before an active weather pattern returns to our area Thursday.

  • Widespread faceted snow surfaces exist from the valley floor to upper elevations. On steep sunny aspects, the recent sun has destroyed some of this.
  • Impressive surface hoar growth noted at middle elevations associated with the inversion cloud deck.
  • The well-documented rain crust was softening by the afternoon on steep sunny mid and upper elevation slopes.  
  • A melt-freeze crust has formed on steep upper elevation sunny slopes. This crust extends above the elevation where the rain crust disappears.
  • Recent rollerballs and small loose wet sluffs were noted on steep sunny aspects at mid and upper elevations.
  • No signs of instability observed while skiing slopes up to 40 degrees at mid and upper elevations.
Snowpack, Avalanche, Weather Images: 
Travel Details
Region: 
Glacier National Park - McDonald Lake Area
Snowpack Details
Snowpack and Weather Details: 
Hide Terrain
Elevation of observation: 
3500-5000 ft
5000-6500 ft
Above 6500 ft
Aspect(s) of observation: 
E
SE
S
SW
W
NW
Persistent Weak Layers: 
Surface Hoar
Facets or Faceted Crust
On the surface
Buried
New Snow in the past 24 hours: 
0.00in.
Snow line: 
Inverted
Sky Cover: 
Mostly Clear (FEW)
Avalanche Details
Avalanche Details: 
Date and Time of Avalanche: 
Monday, January 14, 2019 - 14:45
Avalanche Type: 
Wet Loose
Hide Trigger
Trigger: 
natural
Hide Terrain
Start Zone Slope Angle: 
35
Aspect: 
Southwest
Starting Elevation: 
5000' - 7000'
Hide Size
Destructive Size: 
D1 Relatively harmless to people.
Relative Size: 
R1 Very Small
Avalanche Length (Vertical Run): 
150ft.