Body Of 8th Man Found In Canada Avalanche
Final Body Recovered From Group Of Snowmobilers Buried By Massive Snow Slides
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Volunteers with the Fernie Search and Rescue team prepare to head out to search for eight missing snowmobilers Monday, Dec. 29, 2008 in Fernie, Canada. (AP)
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Flowers are laid in a snowbank in Sparwood, Canada on Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2008 in memory of snowmobilers killed in a avalanche in Fernie. (AP Photo/Canadian Press)
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The chance of 28-year-old Danny Bjarnason still being alive under the snow two days after the accident had been slim, with temperatures in the area well below freezing.
The bodies of Bjarnason's seven companions were found Monday near Fernie in British Columbia's Elk Valley, about 550 miles east of Vancouver.
Eleven men, most of them in their 20s, were swept away when back-to-back avalanches hit Sunday afternoon. Three men freed themselves, digging with their bare hands, and left the area when they feared another avalanche would hit.
It did, soon after they hurried away.
All 11 men came from the nearby coal-mining town of Sparwood, population 4,000, and knew each other, Mayor David Wilks said. Many of them had families, including two whose wives gave birth to their first children a few months ago.
The mayor said his town was devastated by the deaths of the men, all skilled outdoorsmen.
In an emotional news conference Tuesday in Fernie before Bjarnason's body was found, Randy Roberts, Bjarnason's father-in-law, said the men were as prepared as they could be for an emergency. All had shovels and emergency transmitters designed to help locate them in case of an avalanche.
Roberts said no one in the group ever questioned whether it was safe to go.
"You can never predict (avalanches)," Roberts said.
But the Canadian Avalanche Center had issued an alert Sunday saying conditions in the region of the deadly slides were "very touchy" because of 27 inches of new snow combined with a weak snowpack.
The first avalanche Sunday buried seven of the snowmobilers while they were resting at the foot of a hill.
The other four snowmobilers heard their shouts, hurried over and started digging when they were hit by a second avalanche. Two men dug themselves out and pulled a third man free.
The three survivors were distraught about leaving the others, Wilks said.
One survivor, Jeff Adams, went out with the search team Tuesday, a spokesman with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said.
Roberts told the news conference that no one was to blame.
"Nobody, especially (the survivors) ... nobody's at fault, don't blame yourself," he said. "It's an act that happens."
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- Because they are in their 20''s and men at that age are invincible, death happens to someone else.
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- If an avalanche alert was issued, then I would say this is case of Darwinism. I do feel for their families, but people need to learn to realize the outcomes of their actions!
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- A bad thing happened,
Why did these experienced outdoors men not realize that a bunch of snowmobiles (11 ? ) would cause very much vibrations, causing an avalanche ? - Reply to this comment
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