Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Virtually There: B.C. Museum Launches Website As Part Of Avalanche Education

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2015 11:26 AM
    REVELSTOKE, B.C. — It only makes sense that a community located along "avalanche alley" would have a museum focusing on the deadly force of nature.
     
    Revelstoke, B.C., is along a 40-kilometre stretch of the Trans-Canada Highway in the Rogers Pass that has the dubious distinction of having the highest avalanche hazard index of any route in Canada.
     
    Parks Canada says there are 134 avalanche paths in the region and up to 2,000 avalanche events each year.
     
    "Revelstoke is really the epicentre of avalanche research and a lot of the major events and avalanche education. We thought there was more we could do to get out the message of both avalanche history and current avalanche research and education," said Cathy English, the curator of the Revelstoke Museum & Archives.
     
    Revelstoke was founded in the 1880s when the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) was built through the area and mining was an important early industry.
     
    The museum includes snow collection kits, snow science kits, early transponders and an avalanche rescue kit. They aren't ancient artifacts but do date back to the 1950s and 60s.
     
    "There's nothing going back a really, really long way — it's the information that goes back," said English.
     
    The area has had a history of tragic avalanche incidents, most notably March 4, 1910 when 58 men died while attempting to dig out a blocked CP Rail line. It's believed to be Canada's deadliest avalanche.
     
     
    You don't have to go to Revelstoke to view the museum's latest exhibit — you only need a computer. The Land of Thundering Snow website is being billed as Canada's first virtual avalanche exhibit.
     
    "The idea was to provide information on the history of avalanches in Canada and it's not just Rogers Pass or Revelstoke — it covers all of Canada," she said.
     
    "We are providing information on historic avalanche events. The earliest recorded one we were able to find was 1782 in Labrador. We also wanted to show how avalanches impact people and we have a section on avalanche safety."
     
    English said one of the features of the site is an interactive map of Canada which has all of the fatal avalanche events listed. She said users can click on a certain event and find out the details including how many people died, the date of the event and the location.
     
    "What we're doing that I don't think has been done before is showing the historical context," she said.
     
    "The majority of the modern incidences are almost 100 per cent recreation. The earlier ones were almost 100 per cent industry or transportation — miners or railway employees."
     
    Retired Parks Canada biologist and naturalist Dr. John Woods documented the country's 870 avalanche-related deaths from the past 150 years. The website also features more than an hour of video content and interviews with those involved in avalanche safety.
     
     
    English said she's not sure the new site will bring more people through the doors of the small museum in Revelstoke but expects it will raise the region's profile.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Northern Gateway naysayers missed their chance to oppose pipeline: CAPP

    Northern Gateway naysayers missed their chance to oppose pipeline: CAPP
    Lewis Manning told a Federal Court of Appeal in Vancouver that it's a shame that some organizations chose not to take part in the process.

    Northern Gateway naysayers missed their chance to oppose pipeline: CAPP

    Police Seek Person Of Interest In Death Of Man Shot With Arrow In Kitchener, Ont.

    Police Seek Person Of Interest In Death Of Man Shot With Arrow In Kitchener, Ont.
    Investigators say a man described as six feet tall and 40 to 50 years old is believed to have been in the area where Michael Gibbon was found on Monday morning.

    Police Seek Person Of Interest In Death Of Man Shot With Arrow In Kitchener, Ont.

    Mom Seeks Justice For Teen Daughter Carly Fraser After B.C. Refuses To Review 19-Year-Old's Suicide

    Mom Seeks Justice For Teen Daughter Carly Fraser After B.C. Refuses To Review 19-Year-Old's Suicide
    Carly Fraser died 20 hours and 35 minutes after turning 19.

    Mom Seeks Justice For Teen Daughter Carly Fraser After B.C. Refuses To Review 19-Year-Old's Suicide

    Winnipeg Community Activist Michael Redhead Champagn Recognized As Future Leader By Time Magazine

    Winnipeg Community Activist Michael Redhead Champagn Recognized As Future Leader By Time Magazine
    Michael Redhead Champagne, the 28-year-old founder of Aboriginal Youth Opportunities, is featured in an online video and in Time's international print edition.

    Winnipeg Community Activist Michael Redhead Champagn Recognized As Future Leader By Time Magazine

    CJ Fowler: Video Shows Damien Taylor Exhibiting Normal Behaviour Despite His Testimony

    Five minutes of video from the Greyhound depot in Kamloops, B.C., showed Taylor sitting at the door, doing little but looking in his backpack.

    CJ Fowler: Video Shows Damien Taylor Exhibiting Normal Behaviour Despite His Testimony

    Lawsuit Launched Over Fire On Historic Street That Destroyed Downtown New Westminster Building

    Lawsuit Launched Over Fire On Historic Street That Destroyed Downtown New Westminster Building
    The Oct. 10, 2013 fire on Columbia Street destroyed several buildings and businesses including the E.L. Lewis building — which belonged to one family for more than a century.

    Lawsuit Launched Over Fire On Historic Street That Destroyed Downtown New Westminster Building