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33 Trapped Chilean Miners Found Alive, But Could Be Stuck 4 Months - ABC News
33 Trapped Chilean Miners Found Alive, But Could Be Stuck 4 Months
SANTIAGO, Chile, Aug. 22, 2010
There was rejoicing all over Chile today when 33 miners were discovered trapped but alive, but a government official said it could take up to four months to get them out.
Chile's President Sebastian Pinera holds up a plastic bag containing a message, from miners trapped in a collapsed mine, that reads in Spanish "We are ok in the refuge, the 33 miners" in Copiapo, Chile, Sunday Aug. 22, 2010. Thirty-three miners trapped underground for 17 days in a gold and copper mine in Northern Chile sent up a message tied to a drill on Sunday telling rescuers they were all alive.
The miners -- all 32 Chileans and one Bolivian -- were trapped after the upper galleries of the the San José mine, a private mine near the northern town of Copiapó, collapsed 17 days ago.
The collapse happened Aug. 5, close to the time of the miners' lunch break.
Some feared the 33 miners still inside the mine at the time of the collapse could have been in the disaster zone on their way out.
Liliana Ramírez, the wife of one of the oldest miners trapped, said she had faith all along that they were still alive and that she knew that her husband would never let his fellow workers perish.
The miners sent up notes attached to probes drilling into the area of a refuge located 2,297 feet -- almost one-half mile -- underground.
Ramírez said her husband was weak, like they all must be, and said her message was that she wished him the strength to resist until they can be rescued, "and that I love him," she added.
Undersecretary of Mining Pablo Wagner said it will be a long process to dig a hole deep and wide enough to get the trapped miners out, and that it could take three to four months.
The state-owned CODELCO Andina mine in Los Andes, about 50 miles north of Santiago, is sending machinery to the site of the mine that can drill a "chimney" 2.2 feet wide to bring the miners out.
The probes that made contact with the 33 miners are considerably more narrow.
Once this perforation is reinforced and secured, food, water and medicine can be sent down into the area where the survivors are located.
33 Trapped Chilean Miners Found Alive, But Could Be Stuck 4 Months
SANTIAGO, Chile, Aug. 22, 2010
There was rejoicing all over Chile today when 33 miners were discovered trapped but alive, but a government official said it could take up to four months to get them out.
Chile's President Sebastian Pinera holds up a plastic bag containing a message, from miners trapped in a collapsed mine, that reads in Spanish "We are ok in the refuge, the 33 miners" in Copiapo, Chile, Sunday Aug. 22, 2010. Thirty-three miners trapped underground for 17 days in a gold and copper mine in Northern Chile sent up a message tied to a drill on Sunday telling rescuers they were all alive.
The miners -- all 32 Chileans and one Bolivian -- were trapped after the upper galleries of the the San José mine, a private mine near the northern town of Copiapó, collapsed 17 days ago.
The collapse happened Aug. 5, close to the time of the miners' lunch break.
Some feared the 33 miners still inside the mine at the time of the collapse could have been in the disaster zone on their way out.
Liliana Ramírez, the wife of one of the oldest miners trapped, said she had faith all along that they were still alive and that she knew that her husband would never let his fellow workers perish.
The miners sent up notes attached to probes drilling into the area of a refuge located 2,297 feet -- almost one-half mile -- underground.
Ramírez said her husband was weak, like they all must be, and said her message was that she wished him the strength to resist until they can be rescued, "and that I love him," she added.
Undersecretary of Mining Pablo Wagner said it will be a long process to dig a hole deep and wide enough to get the trapped miners out, and that it could take three to four months.
The state-owned CODELCO Andina mine in Los Andes, about 50 miles north of Santiago, is sending machinery to the site of the mine that can drill a "chimney" 2.2 feet wide to bring the miners out.
The probes that made contact with the 33 miners are considerably more narrow.
Once this perforation is reinforced and secured, food, water and medicine can be sent down into the area where the survivors are located.