Trapped Chilean miners are reaching the surface

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Rocky

Still Rocking
Supporting Member
I'm watching live on TV the rescue of the Chilean copper miners who have been trapped underground for 69 days. It's an amazing rescue story.
When I was in Chile two years ago we were on tour much further north and didn't go anywhere near that particular area.
Mining is a major industry in Chile and we did see many mines as we rode in very remote areas.
My fingers are crossed that all the miners will be on the surface today and that nothing goes wrong.
 
I was watching this before work on Sky News and it is amazing. They must of has some sort of contact with them all this time to be able to send them food and water. I wonder what long term effects this will have on these miners
 
I've been following the story to some extent and it's an amazing story of how they got food and water down to them, kept in contact, kept their spirits up, etc.
Having been to Chile and having ridden through the deserts, plains and mountains, I have more of an interest in what goes on there than I did before going.
The Chileans are industrious hard working people and I admired how they cope with the harshness of the country.
It was reported that the miners shaved and washed their hair so they would look presentable when they emerged from the rescue capsule. I thought that was a riot!
But I was amazed at how good the miners looked after all this time in a could-be grave.
I'm very proud that Canada had a part in cutting the rescue hole and I tip my helmet to NASA too for their expertise in space travel that came into play there.
It sometimes takes incidents like this to advance technology.
The whole thing is an amazing story.
 
Just as a matter of interest the drill bit they used to drill through that heavy rock came from SA :y114: :y115:

Rocky how were they getting food and water to these guys I missed that part
 
Dave, they drilled a smaller hole into the chamber where they expected any survivors to be and that's when they learned they had 33 to rescue. The hole was big enough to send down provisions, a line of communication and anything that would make the men comfortable and keep them healthy.
The plan was to then drill a hole big enough to bring a man up.
A similar capsule was used in the US a few years ago and the current one is a big improvement on that one.
The CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) is running the story continually on TV and I just saw another miner step out of the capsule.
I'm amazed at the apparent good condition of the men. They don't look like they've been through such an ordeal.
16 are up as I write this.

Nova Scotia has a huge coal mining history and we've had our share of mine disasters with a large lose of life over the last century. The most recent one was 27 men lost about15 years ago. There was no hope of body recover so the mine was sealed and will never open again.
 
I can't imagine what these men have endured. I was fascinated when they reported that experts from NASA who managed the astronaughts on the space-station were called in to help the miners deal with being confined and the psychological aspects of the ordeal. I watched the first and second man come to the surface. I thought the 2nd guy who brought a few rocks up with him to give to the Chile President and others who helped as a great idea and a wonderful gesture not to mention a bit of comic relief. He seems to be quite a character.
Here's an article from the SA newspaper "The Mail & Guardian". Ofcourse South African's are ALL claiming credit and standing 10ft tall at the moment. :wink: And not least, our stupid Union "Cosatu" just had to get their stupid 2cents in!

WELL DONE TO ALL WHO HELPED RESCUE THESE MEN. WHAT AN INCREDIBLE SHOW OF INTERNATIONAL UNITY. :y115:

South African construction services company Murray & Roberts on Wednesday said it was privileged to be part of the Chilean mine-rescue process.

"We are very privileged to have been a part of this process and it's a feather in our cap as South Africans as leaders in underground mining," spokesperson Ed Jardim said.

"The Chilean government has managed the rescue and drilling process exceptionally well and we have been proud to have assisted the government through this process."

Jardim said even though the hole being used for the rescue was not the one drilled by Murray & Roberts, its staff members were still on site at the San Jose mine to help.

Supporting work crews from different countries had raised their national flags at the mine and the South African flag was also visible, he said.

When the Chilean government first called for help, Murray & Roberts had the first drill on site.

"We were plan A. We shipped the drill [with the South African flag painted on it] to Chile along with some staff," Jardim said.

Murray & Roberts had an existing operation in Chile with controlling shareholding in two mining contract companies, Terracem and Cementation Sudamerica.

Terracem was a specialist raise drilling company and Cementation Sudamerica focused on major vertical shaft and underground mine infrastructure work, Jardim said.

A large diameter raise drilling machine, the Strata 950, was used by Terracem in the rescue operation.

Rotary Vertical Drilling System technology, co-developed by Murray & Roberts, was also applied to accurately drill a pilot hole to reach the trapped miners.

The Strata 950 had just completed a shaft for Codelco's Andina mine and was quickly transferred to the San Jose mine where drilling commenced immediately, he said.

Plan B
The miners were now being rescued via the Plan B hole, independent of the Murray & Roberts hole.

The Plan B drill broke through to the miners on Saturday, October 9.

The rescue was started on Wednesday morning, with the first miner surfacing just after 5am South African time.

The 33 miners, 32 Chileans and a Bolivian, were trapped 688m underground for 69 days in the San Jose mine near Copiapo in the north of Chile.

The miners had been trapped since August 5, after the main access tunnel to the mine collapsed.

The Chamber of Mines of South Africa on Wednesday complimented Murray & Roberts for its part in the Chilean mining rescue operation.

The acting chief executive of the chamber, Peter Bunkell, said "while we have been encouraged by the ingenuity of those responsible for the rescue operation, we are delighted today to be able to congratulate their efforts and are also happy that the miners are finally being reunited with their loved ones".

"Sixty nine days is a very long time underground and such rescue operations are serious technical challenges, which are further complicated by the emotions of the rescuers and those being rescued," he said.

The Congress of South African Trade Unions and the South African Communist Party on Wednesday also congratulated all those who were involved in the rescue operations from South Africa and the rest of the world. -- Sapa
 
It has been a heartwarming story with a truly happy ending in sight. I am amazed at how good spirits the miners have stay in throughout this long ordeal.
 
[quote author=DaveM link=topic=10693.msg52138#msg52138 date=1287035675]
Just watched the last rescue worker being taken out the mine this morning
[/quote]

Me too - got up just in time to catch it. What a story to tell. Feel sorry for the married guy who's mistress turned up to welcome him home!
 
[quote author=Gromit link=topic=10693.msg52141#msg52141 date=1287040204]
Me too - got up just in time to catch it. What a story to tell. Feel sorry for the married guy who's mistress turned up to welcome him home!
[/quote]

:y114: That will teach him
 
I found the whole thing facinating .I watched mostly the CNN version and part of the sky broadcast.It was quite interesting to note that South Africas input was not mentioned at all while I watched and from what I understand we had a big part to play.Main thing is that they are all safe.Miner no 21 asked for the mistress to be there and she was the one who got the first hug from him .
I feel a movie comming on
 
Much credit has to go to the Chilean President who from the onset said that no governmental red tape would be allowed to slow the process down. He instantly approved and asked for any help for other countries and then welcomed any and all help from outsiders.

Some Presidents should learn from that....but I won't mention any names.
 
It was excited to see those last three manners come to the surface. What a wonderful end to the story. The assembly of talent, help, material, and tools is remarkable. If this tragedy were in this country, Congress would have been holding hearing before the relief shaft was even drilled and finger pointing would have been epidemic. Political grandstanding would have ruled each day.
 
A similar event happened in the USA (Pennsylvania...at the Quecreek Mine about an hour from here) a couple years ago although the miner were not as deep. They used the same method of getting them out. Too bad not all the miners lived however since the cave-in was due to a natural gas explosion and some of them died from the fumes.
 
[quote author=The Seeker link=topic=10693.msg52207#msg52207 date=1287098393]
Much credit has to go to the Chilean President who from the onset said that no governmental red tape would be allowed to slow the process down. He instantly approved and asked for any help for other countries and then welcomed any and all help from outsiders.

Some Presidents should learn from that....but I won't mention any names.
[/quote]

Yes he really did shine when it came to this and also being there all the time. Lets just hope they now carry through and improve the conditions on these mines
 

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