Avalanches can't really be measured, except by the damage they cause. They are observed by the people that are lucky (or unlucky) enough to see them.
the way that people in an avalanche disaster area decrease the damage done by a avalanche is they put up snow fences that are like fences that stand on an angle and they are meant to break and roll with the snow and while the snow is rolling, it's very likely for the snow fences to stick back into the ground and that decreases the avalanches speed so that when it hits it isn't as bad
it depends on what kind of sentence it's in.
Landslides and avalanches are similar, because they are formed where unstable masses fall down a mountainside under gravity. They are different, because landslides are formed fromsolid rock or soil, whereas avalanches are formed from snow and ice.
the way a avalanches stronger is the higher the mountain the bigger the avalanches
The Damage Done was created in 1997.
The Avalanches was created in 1997.
The Damage Done has 211 pages.
avalanches
avalanches
avalanches occur in the mountains
Loss of life, damage of property, disrupt transportation corridors. In a severe winter, avalanches can close mountain highways!