Video shows no sign of six missing miners


Miners have been rescued after more than eight days in past collapses.

HUNTINGTON, Utah (AP) — Ghostly video images from deep underground showed a tool bag, shards of broken rock, a twisted conveyor belt and dripping water but no signs of life as the arduous search for six missing miners stretched Monday into a second week.

Even as the grainy footage played for reporters, the mine’s co-owner insisted there was reason to believe the miners could be alive — the mine’s roof was intact, there was abundant open space and plenty of drinkable water.

“There are many, many reasons to have hope still,” said Bob Murray, head of Murray Energy Corp. and co-owner of the mine.

But he acknowledged the search, which has been interrupted by additional cave-ins and two 1,800-foot holes that came up empty and prolonged silence from underground, has not gone as smoothly as planned.

“Progress is slow — way too slow.”

Meanwhile, memos from an engineering firm revealed concern about structural problems at the mine as early as March, when a different underground area was damaged.

Rescuers planned to drill a third hole deep into the mine. A 21⁄2-inch-wide hole and a nearly 9-inch-wide hole drilled last week have found no sign of life where the miners were working when a collapse hit the Crandall Canyon mine early Aug. 6.

What was shown

The video was recorded Sunday evening by a camera dropped into a shaft more than 1,800 feet deep. It showed water dripping in front of the lens as light faintly illuminated objects — a chain, a twisted conveyor belt, a tool bag — 10 to 15 feet away.

“We see a lot of open area. We see good height. Space is what they need and we saw a lot of space,” said Al Davis of the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration.

Murray said he believes the tool bag belongs to one of the miners, who may have been hundreds of feet away from the bag while working.

Davis said the view was basically what was seen in earlier attempts with the camera, but with better resolution and better lighting. Still, the camera saw only about 15 feet when it was lowered into the mine overnight.

The new 85⁄8-inch hole was to be drilled to an area to which the miners might have fled after finding escape routes blocked. Stickler said the concussion of the original earth movement may have trapped good air there.

The new drilling, believed to be about 1,300 feet from the second drilled hole, required 1,300 feet of new road to move the rig. It was to begin sometime Monday.

Family members

The increasing emotional strain on the relatives has been evident in recent days. The son of missing miner Kerry Allred appeared sad and tired during an interview.

“I’ve accepted all possibilities,” said Cody Allred, 32.

Family members have previously talked to news media after the private official briefings at a school in Huntington. On Monday, sheriff’s deputies moved reporters far from the school after journalists gathered around MSHA chief Richard Stickler as he left the briefing.

Mining rescues after eight or more days are not unheard of. In May 2006, two miners were rescued after being trapped for 14 days following a collapse at an Australian mine.

In 2002, nine coal miners were rescued after surviving eight days in a mine in northwestern China. In 1968, six miners were rescued after 10 days in West Virginia.

By using this site, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of use.

» Accept
» Learn More