-
Top Landing Spots For Von Miller Following Shocking Bills Release - 11 mins ago
-
Opinion | Musk’s Tweet-Fueled Bubble May Be About to Burst - 33 mins ago
-
Trump’s Putin Boost Like Hitler’s Final Deal: Top Historian - 46 mins ago
-
Secret Service Shoots Armed Man Near the White House - about 1 hour ago
-
Gen Z Man Has Revelation About Why His Parents Were ‘Always Tired’ - about 1 hour ago
-
Russian Forces Walk Inside Gas Pipeline to Out-Flank Ukrainian Troops - 2 hours ago
-
Syria’s Interim President Calls for Unity Amid Fresh Fighting - 2 hours ago
-
‘The stress keeps you up at night’: Emotional devastation lingers in L.A. fire zones - 2 hours ago
-
Weeks Old Puppy’s Eye Left ‘Hanging Out’ After Being Attacked by Mom - 3 hours ago
-
For California towns with bear problems, using dogs to hunt is no fix - 3 hours ago
Ski patroller caught in Mammoth Mountain avalanche dies of injuries
A ski patroller caught in a Valentine‘s Day avalanche at Mammoth Mountain has died from the injuries she sustained, resort officials said Saturday.
Claire Murphy was one of two patrollers conducting “avalanche mitigation” at Lincoln Mountain after an atmospheric river storm dumped 6 feet of snow on the ski resort in 36 hours.
The area had been closed to the public when the avalanche hit around 11:30 a.m. Her patrol partner was extracted uninjured, but Murphy was not as fortunate.
“It is with the heaviest of hearts that we share the Mammoth Mountain Ski Patroller, Claire Murphy, who was hospitalized last Friday, passed away as a result of her injuries,” said a statement posted on the resort’s website.
The avalanche shut down the resort temporarily and attracted an outpouring of support from the local ski community.
Ski patrols from other resorts such as Bear Mountain and Palisades at Tahoe raced to be by Murphy’s side and helped fill in at Mammoth as the resort prepared for an influx of skiers, according to the Orange County Register and posts on the Mammoth Mountain Ski Patrol Alumni Assn.’s Facebook page.
On average, more than 20 people die every year in avalanches in the United States, according to data from the Colorado Avalanche Information Center.
Most victims are backcountry skiers and snowmobilers who take their chances on remote slopes not served by ski patrollers.
Source link