Six backcountry skiers were found alive and 10 others were missing Tuesday after an avalanche in Northern California as a powerful winter storm moved through the state.
Search and rescue crews were sent to Frog Lake in the Castle Peak area, northwest of Lake Tahoe, after someone called 911 at about 11:30 a.m. to report an avalanche with people buried.
Ashley Quadros, a spokesperson for the Nevada County Sheriff's Office, said the six skiers were asked to shelter in place "as best they can" until ski teams can reach them. She said 46 first responders were trying to reach them.
Three rescue teams, two on skis and one in a snowcat, were making their way to the group, which included four ski guides, Quadros said. The sheriff's office posted videos of a group of three rescuers carrying skis as they walked in blizzard-like conditions.
The group was on the last day of a three-day backcountry skiing trip, said Steve Reynaud, a Tahoe National Forest avalanche forecaster with the Sierra Avalanche Center. Reynaud said his group has had contact with people in the area.
He said the skiers had spent two nights in huts that required skiing in "rugged mountainous terrain" for up to 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) and bringing along all food and supplies.
California is being walloped this week by a winter storm carrying treacherous thunderstorms, high winds, and heavy snow in mountain areas.
"It's particularly dangerous in the backcountry right now just because we're at the height of the storm," said Brandon Schwartz, Tahoe National Forest lead avalanche forecaster at the Sierra Avalanche Center in Truckee.
Castle Peak, a 9,110-foot (2,777-meter) peak in the Donner Summit area of the Sierra Nevada, is a popular backcountry skiing destination.
The area in the Central Sierra Nevada, including the Greater Lake Tahoe region, was facing high avalanche danger in the backcountry with large slides expected to occur Tuesday and into Wednesday.
The dangerous conditions were caused by rapidly accumulating snowfall piling on already fragile snowpack layers coupled with gale-force winds.
Several ski resorts around Lake Tahoe were fully or partially closed due to the extreme weather. The resorts along highways have avalanche mitigation programs and were not expected to be at as high a risk as the backcountry where travel in, near, or below the avalanche terrain was strongly discouraged, the center said.
In the nearby town of Soda Springs, at least 30 inches (76 centimeters) of snow had fallen in the last 24 hours, according to Soda Springs Mountain Resort.
Forecasters said the western slope of the Sierra Nevada in northern Shasta County — including portions of Interstate 5 — and parts of the state's Pacific Coast Range could see up to 8 feet (2.4 meters) of snow before the storm moves through late Wednesday.
The storm wreaked havoc on roads from Sonoma County to the Sierra Nevada. Traffic was halted temporarily in both directions on I-80 near the Nevada state line due to spinouts and crashes, the California Department of Transportation reported.
In January, an avalanche in the region buried a snowmobiler in snow and killed him, authorities said. Each winter, 25 to 30 people die in avalanches in the U.S., according to the National Avalanche Center.
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Watson reported from San Diego.
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