Submitted by ybdiel t3_zvnuvz in UpliftingNews
Snakend t1_j1rt65o wrote
Reply to comment by lineasmg in All 10 people feared missing in Austria avalanche found alive | CNN by ybdiel
you can breathe in snow.
pidgey77 t1_j1ruw25 wrote
So many avalanche experts in this thread
pessimistic_platypus t1_j1rxkn4 wrote
Only up to a point; air doesn't move as freely in snow as in, well, air, so you do eventually run out of oxygen if you can't create a sufficiently-large vent to the surface.
This article says that 70% of fully-buried avalanche victims die of oxygen loss within 35 minutes without an air pocket, and after 90 minutes, even air pockets aren't enough (unless they connect to the outside atmosphere).
pjshaw1995 t1_j1s0etm wrote
yeah but the snow can be so densely packed that your chest cavity literally cannot expand to get air in. source: am a ski patroller.
kelp_forests t1_j1s4319 wrote
I think everyone is talking past each other and the real answer is if you survive without a life threatening injury, your main issue is oxygen for, then “shortly” afterwards, cold.
Source: ER doctkr with no ski experience, open to corrections.
JackRusselTerrorist t1_j1ugbzf wrote
Generally speaking in any collapse/land slide/ avalanche/ etc. your best bet is to be on your hands and knees, to ensure you’ve got a void beneath you that your chest can expand into, and have a little air pocket.
In an avalanche, having your back to a ledge is your best bet.
1_small_step t1_j1s4azf wrote
In avalanche hardened snow, you run out of oxygen in around half an hour.
About half of all avalanche deaths are by suffocation, the other half is due to trauma. No one dies in an avalanche due to freezing.
[deleted] t1_j1rui4j wrote
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[deleted] t1_j1sgs5f wrote
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saltesc t1_j1tolga wrote
🤣
YoudontknowSMIT t1_j1rvbln wrote
Perhaps, but it’s significantly more difficult to breathe after avalanche snow has packed into your entire respiratory tract and filled your lungs 😳
pessimistic_platypus t1_j1rwu7q wrote
Avalanche snow isn't a fluid; I'm pretty sure it isn't typically going to get forced down your throat, and definitely not into your lungs.
But if the snow is dense enough, you still will run out of air eventually.
According to this study, most people buried in avalanches do die because they run out of air, but it sounds like it's a lot slower than drowning, so there is a better chance for rescue if people get to you soon enough.
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