Chile, Mining | featured news

Video Messages From Trapped Chilean Miners

33 trapped miners trapped in a collapsed mine in Chile have sent new video to the surface in which they send greetings, show the space they are confined in and sing the Chilean national anthem.

 

Miners' deep motivation: Stay slim or stay in mine

Miners' deep motivation: Stay slim or stay in mine

Put on a show. Play cards. Sing. Get exercise. And whatever you do, don't get too fat to squeeze through the escape tunnel. Chilean officials are offering lots of advice to help 33 miners trapped underground keep their health and sanity as they wait to be rescued. One thing they're not sharing with the men is their estimate that it could take four months to drill them out of an emergency shelter nearly half a mile below the surface.

 

Trapped miners make verbal contact

The 33 workers trapped inside a mine in Chile cheered, applauded and sang the country's national anthem in their first verbal contact with officials.

 

Chileans Work to Ensure Miners Survive Weeks After a Collapse

Chileans Work to Ensure Miners Survive Weeks After a Collapse

It was a remarkable tale of survival from the depths of a collapsed Chilean mine: After more than two weeks of failed rescue efforts, a video camera threaded deep underground captured the first images of 33 miners, all alive and apparently in good health. Officials said it could take as long as four months to dig a new tunnel wide enough to lift the miners to the surface.

 

Subscribe to this RSS topic: Syndicate content