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French man killed in avalanche on Japan ski mountain
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 31, 2020

The body of a French man was found Friday after an avalanche struck a northern Japanese mountain where he was backcountry skiing with seven other French citizens, local police said Friday.

The death of Sylvain Lethier, 38, was confirmed after a rescue team found his body off the slopes of the Tomamu ski resort in the northern Hokkaido region, a brief police statement said.

The avalanche happened Thursday afternoon when the group of eight went off the resort's ski courses to venture into the untouched snow on the mountain.

Seven of the group were able to descend on their own by Thursday evening after the avalanche, leaving Lethier, who was "unconscious and in critical condition", according to a local fire official.

Tomamu is home to a sprawling resort belonging to Club Med, the French-headquartered company owned by China's Fosun Group.

The Hokkaido region boasts powdery snow that is popular with skiers.


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NASA launches in-depth snow study
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jan 24, 2020
The last time NASA carried out an in-depth study of winter storms in the heavily populated Northeast, the Berlin Wall had just come down and George W. Bush occupied the White House. That changed in mid-January when a team led by University of Washington researcher Lynn McMurdie began a six-week campaign to better understand how snow bands form and evolve. The team began deploying a suite of complementary, tried-and-true remote-sensing and in-situ instruments aboard two NASA research aircraft ... read more

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