Current:Home > StocksAvalanche kills snowboarder in Colorado backcountry -Capital Dream Guides
Avalanche kills snowboarder in Colorado backcountry
View
Date:2025-04-13 13:58:31
OPHIR, Colo. (AP) — An avalanche killed a 67-year-old man as he was snowboarding solo in the Colorado backcountry, authorities said Tuesday, marking the fourth U.S. avalanche death this winter.
The victim, Peter Harrelson, was a doctor and longtime resident of the small town of Ophir in southwest Colorado, the San Miguel County Sheriff’s Office said.
He was reported overdue on Monday evening after embarking on a backcountry tour in the Waterfall Canyon area south of Ophir. Friends followed his tracks that night but were unable to find him, according to the Colorado Avalanche Center.
Search and rescue teams reached the site Tuesday morning and found Harrelson’s body, the center said. Avalanche center spokesperson Kelsy Been said the man was believed to have been traveling alone.
After a slow start to the winter, avalanche dangers spiked in Colorado over recent weeks. About 1,100 avalanches were reported statewide by the center over a weeklong period beginning Jan. 11.
Conditions have since improved and the area where Harrelson was killed had only a moderate avalanche danger on Monday. But the risk of accidents remains, Been said.
“There’s still dangerous conditions out there. We’re still getting reports of dangerous avalanches,” she said.
Harrelson’s death comes after three people were killed in avalanches earlier this month, all within less than a week.
Those accidents included a backcountry skier killed in the mountains of western Wyoming, an accident at a California ski resort that killed one person and injured three others, and an avalanche that killed a skier and wounded a second person in the Idaho backcountry near the Montana border.
veryGood! (825)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- House votes to censure Rep. Adam Schiff over Trump investigations
- Missing sub pilot linked to a famous Titanic couple who died giving lifeboat seats to younger passengers
- Bumblebee Decline Linked With Extreme Heat Waves
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Why Jana Kramer's Relationship With Coach Allan Russell Is Different From Her Past Ones
- Facing cancer? Here's when to consider experimental therapies, and when not to
- In Australia’s Burning Forests, Signs We’ve Passed a Global Warming Tipping Point
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- North Carolina's governor vetoed a 12-week abortion ban, setting up an override fight
Ranking
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Exxon Reports on Climate Risk and Sees Almost None
- How the Harvard Covid-19 Study Became the Center of a Partisan Uproar
- Exxon Ramps Up Free Speech Argument in Fighting Climate Fraud Investigations
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Maine Town Wins Round in Tar Sands Oil Battle With Industry
- Lifesaving or stigmatizing? Parents wrestle with obesity treatment options for kids
- Sudanese doctors should not have to risk their own lives to save lives
Recommendation
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
She's a U.N. disability advocate who won't see her own blindness as a disability
Two and a Half Men's Angus T. Jones Is Unrecognizable in Rare Public Sighting
Supercomputers, Climate Models and 40 Years of the World Climate Research Programme
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Every Time Lord Scott Disick Proved He Was Royalty
Worried about your kids' video gaming? Here's how to help them set healthy limits
Wildfires, Climate Policies Start to Shift Corporate Views on Risk