How the avalanche develops and what is the result of its slide

Orthecs are natural phenomena produced by tiny snow fillos, which can produce a mass of hundreds of tons. The world's avalanches are known as “The white dragons” or the hotshot “because they have caught many people, leading them to death. Ortecs can be created on mountain slopes by snow and [...]
The world's avalanches are known as “The white dragons” or the hotshot “because they have caught many people, leading them to death.
Ortecs can be created on mountain slopes by falling snow in crystals, balls, and grains.
Changes in air temperature and the pressure produced by snow gathering cause crystals to shrink as they settle on the ground. Within just 24 hours, 30 inches [30 cm] of snow and porars can be attached up to 10 inches [10 cm].
Snow type, low quantity, terrain tilt, temperature change, and wind force all determine whether an avalanche will be set in motion or not. An avalanche can also begin by chance from the weight of a human or an animal.
However, there are other types of avalanches, and the most dangerous are those created from the gathering of old snow that has been packed over time. When the upper layer of snow breaks, large chunks of ice can slide down the mountainside at speeds of 50 and 80 miles per hour.
Wind avalanches are also created when a mixture of snow and porars consisting of crystal - headed and grains - the type of snow like powder enjoyed by skiers - is scattered into the air by a strong gust of wind.
Being easy, the snow rises into the air and may fall down the valley at a speed of over 300 miles [300 km] per hour. In this case, air pressure preceding the snow mass increases so much that the avalanche can pull off roofs and even destroy homes within seconds.
Ortecs can be predicted by the warning of climate change in certain areas, but danger is never inevitable.
Skiers, climbers, and residents of steep mountain areas must wait until mountain slopes are checked to see if they are safe.
Warning signs must also be placed in areas where avalanche risk is highest.
The danger of avalanches can be minimized if trees are planted, increasing sword stability and helping to reduce further damage in the valley.
Kosovo is not part of avalanche risk zones, but in 2012 an avalanche in the village of Restelica, a remote village in the Gora region, had covered several homes of the Reka family.
That avalanche claimed the lives of 10 members of this family, and the little girl Amsera, then 7 years old, had been taken out alive from the ruins of her home.
Today, as a result of a snow avalanche in Brezovica has remained dead, 37-year-old Arrian Daci, Deputy Minister of Diaspore and Strategic Investments, at the same time the son of Academy of Sciences Chairman Nexhat Daci. /Call. com











