PROVO, Utah, Dec. 30, 2003

Snowstorm Halts Search In Utah

Two Snowboarders Remain Missing Following Friday's Avalanches

    • Family and friends (foreground) joined authorities in the search for snowboarders buried by three back-to-back avalanches in a remote area about a mile north of the Sundance ski resort.

      Family and friends (foreground) joined authorities in the search for snowboarders buried by three back-to-back avalanches in a remote area about a mile north of the Sundance ski resort.  (AP/Daily Herald/Marc Haddock)

    • J.D. Settle, who survived despite being temporarily trapped in snow up to his neck, talked only briefly to reporters before joining rescue workers in the hunt for his lost friends.

      J.D. Settle, who survived despite being temporarily trapped in snow up to his neck, talked only briefly to reporters before joining rescue workers in the hunt for his lost friends.  (AP/Daily Herald/Marc Haddock)

    • Adam Merz, 18, of Orem, Utah - one of the snowboarders who is still missing - seen here in an undated photo provided by a relative.

      Adam Merz, 18, of Orem, Utah - one of the snowboarders who is still missing - seen here in an undated photo provided by a relative.  (AP Photo/Pool)

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(AP)  Search crews on Sunday found the body of one of three snowboarders buried under a huge avalanche, after two days of digging and probing through snow piled up dozens of feet deep in spots.

Mike Hebert, 19, of Orem, was found in just four feet of snow in Provo Canyon. He was identified by his driver's license and cell phone, which were with the body when a searcher probing the snow with a pole found it late Sunday afternoon, Utah County Sheriff Jim Tracy said.

Hebert's relatives were at the scene and were notified shortly after the body was discovered.

Hopeful that the bodies of the other snowboarders were nearby, searchers worked after dark Sunday in hopes of finding Hebert's friends Adam Merz, 18, and Rod Newberry, 20. But rescue workers had to suspend their efforts Monday, when a snowstorm moved into the area.

Hebert, Merz and Newberry were among five snowboarding friends swept away Friday by the avalanche, in a remote area with no avalanche control about 25 miles northeast of Provo and a mile north of Sundance ski resort. The other two men survived, despite being swept a half mile down a narrow chute above Provo Canyon's Aspen Grove area.

J.D. Settle, 20, dug himself out of the avalanche, only to be buried to his neck by a second, smaller slide. He survived with a slight knee injury and was treated for hypothermia, then joined the rescue effort Sunday afternoon.

"I want to go up and help find my friends. That's all I want to do," Settle said before Hebert's body was found. "I thought I was gone. That third one, I thought it was going to bury me because I had just my head poking out of the snow and that's it."

There was no sign of the missing snowboarders until a dog sniffed out Merz's black ski cap along the eastern edge of the snowpack left by the avalanches. Searching in the same area, rescuers found a backpack, a snowboard and another hat before discovering Hebert's body.

Authorities hope to resume the search on Wednesday.



© MMIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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