Five French Foreign Legionnaires were killed Monday during a training exercise in the French Alps, the second mountain tragedy in France in less than a week.
Another six soldiers were injured near the resort of Valfrejus, with one in intensive care in hospital after suffering hypothermia.
They were among a group of about 50 soldiers taking part in the skiing exercise.
Three helicopters were involved in the search, as well as five police dogs and three doctors.
The nationalities of the victims were not immediately known. The French Foreign Legion attracts recruits from around the world.
French President Francois Hollande expressed "the nation's solidarity" over the deaths and wished the injured a speedy recovery.
He also asked Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian to head to the scene of the accident, the presidency said in a statement.
Drian was expected to arrive early Tuesday.
The avalanche took place at 1:50 pm (1250 GMT) at an altitude of between 2,350 and 2,600 meters (7,700-8,500 feet).
French prosecutors are looking into whether they or military authorities should handle the probe of the accident. If investigators find evidence of criminal wrongdoing the military would handle the case.
The regiment to which the soldiers were attached is specialized in mountain warfare and all the members have military skiing qualifications.
They were in the mountains in preparation for their departure on an operation.
The unit experienced a similar tragedy in 2012 in the Alps when an avalanche swept away five of its members, leaving one dead.
Monday's accident came days after two French teenage students and a Ukrainian tourist were killed in an avalanche in the French Alps last Wednesday.
A French teacher who took the students onto a closed skiing piste in that incident has been charged with involuntary manslaughter.
The 47-year-old, who was seriously injured in the incident was charged at his bedside in hospital in the south-central city of Grenoble.
The victims, a 16-year-old girl and 14-year-old boy, were from a school in Lyon. The 56-year-old Ukrainian man who was also killed in the avalanche was not part of the group.
According to prosecutors, the piste was closed off with netting and warnings in four languages but the school group climbed over the netting "fully aware" of what they were doing.
The piste had been closed all season because of a lack of snow. But heavy snowfall in recent days had blanketed the mountains, prompting authorities to warn of a high risk of avalanches across the French Alps.
Dozens die each year in avalanches in France's popular ski resorts. At least 45 people died in snowslides during the 2014-15 winter season in France, according to the National Agency for the Study of Snow and Avalanches (ANENA), more than double the previous year.
The deadliest avalanche in France's history occurred in 1970 when 39 people were killed when their chalet was hit by an avalanche at the Val d'Isere ski resort.
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