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couloir
[kool-wahr, koo-lwar]
noun
plural
couloirsa steep gorge or gully on the side of a mountain, especially in the Alps.
couloir
/ ˈkuːlwɑː, kulwar /
noun
a deep gully on a mountain side, esp in the French Alps
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of couloir1
Example Sentences
The forecaster, Nick Burks, 37, was backcountry skiing on Gunsight Mountain in the Elkhorn Mountains in northeastern Oregon on March 6 when he triggered an avalanche at the top of a couloir, or crevasse, in the mountain, the Colorado Avalanche Information Center reported.
As of late March, the two remaining deceased climbers were assumed to be buried by additional snowfall and subsequent avalanches near the couloir’s base.
On Feb. 19, a group of six climbers were climbing a steep, narrow gully — called a couloir — on the peak near Leavenworth when an avalanche crashed down the mountainside.
The terrain on Colchuck’s northeast couloir made the small avalanche deadly.
The bodies of Jeannie Lee and Yun Park were last seen at the base of the couloir, but rescuers on that helicopter flight were unable to locate their remains.
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