My thoughts exactly Peter
I seem to recall seeing part of a documentary on TV several years ago where
miners were rescued in a similar manner in (I think) Germany? Perhaps
someone can recall the incident?
I also think that now is the time for some serious questions about how such
an incident could occur.
Phil Clifford
-----Original Message-----
From: mining-history [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of
Peter Claughton
Sent: 28 July 2002 07:29 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [MiningHistory] RESCUE
For the benefit of UK based list members, the message below relates to the
rescue today of nine coal miners trapped by an inrush in the US, and
certainly warrants rejoicing but raises a few questions.
Was 'history made'? Was the rescue method, drilling a large diameter shaft
c.240 feet to the air pocket in the mine, unprecedented?
The inrush of water is of course not unprecedented, neither is the apparent
ignorance of adjacent flooded workings. The Lofthouse inrush disaster of
1973 focused the UK authorities on the need to maintain the historical
record. Where do the US authorities stand on this matter?
Peter
>We've just seen history made this week. Thank God and
>congratulations!
>
>Sam
______________________________________________
Peter Claughton, Blaenpant Morfil, Rosebush, Clynderwen,
Pembrokeshire, Wales SA66 7RE.
Tel. 01437 532578; Fax. 01437 532921; Mobile 07831 427599
University of Exeter - School of Historical, Political and Sociological
Studies
(Centre for South Western Historical Studies)
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
Co-owner - mining-history e-mail discussion list.
See http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/files/mining-history/ for details.
Mining History Pages - http://www.exeter.ac.uk/~pfclaugh/mhinf/
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