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Eight skiers confirmed dead after California avalanche; one still missing

Authorities said that eight skiers were killed in an avalanche on California's Sierra Nevada mountains, while one remains missing. This is the deadliest avalanche to ever occur in U.S. History.

Rescuers found six survivors late Tuesday, including a man and five females, amid an intense winterstorm that dumped several feet of snow in the Sierra highlands.

A group of backcountry skiing enthusiasts were buried by an avalanche that swept through the Castle Peak area in Truckee, California around 11:30 am Pacific time, Tuesday. Nevada County Sheriff Shannan Moon told a Wednesday afternoon press conference that one of the skiers is still being treated at a hospital for non-life threatening injuries.

The survivors took refuge in an improvised shelter made partly of tarpaulin and communicated via radio beacons and text messaging with rescuers.

Moon said that about 50 rescuers from the north and south were sent to "extreme conditions" including blinding?snow and gale force?winds. The team used a snowcat to reach the survivors within two miles and then skied to the accident.

Authorities said that one of the dead skiers was married. Blackbird Mountain Guides had just completed a three-day trip with a group of skiers. Four guides and eleven clients were part of the tour group. They stayed in Frog Lake Backcountry Huts, located at 7,500 feet (2,300 meters) above sea level, near Donner Summit, just northwest from Truckee.

The mountain gets more than 400 inches in snow each winter. This makes it one of the most snowy places in the western hemisphere.

According to its website, Blackbird was established?in 2020. It operates in California and Washington state, as well as British Columbia and many popular ski spots abroad. The company offers guided ski trips, as well as alpine climbs and avalanche training.

The avalanche alert issued by the Sierra Avalanche Center on Tuesday remained valid on Wednesday morning. The agency stated that "HIGH avalanche risk could continue throughout the day on Wednesday."

According to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center which has tallied six U.S. Avalanche deaths so far this winter, Avalanches claim an average of 27 lives every winter in the United States. (Reporting and editing by Nick Zieminski; Additional reporting by Brad Brooks; Steve Gorman; Devika Nair. Writing by Joseph Ax)

(source: Reuters)