2010 Copiapó mining accident

Coordinates: 27°9′36.73″S 70°29′48.4″W / 27.1602028°S 70.496778°W / -27.1602028; -70.496778
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2010 Copiapó mining accident
Color photo of San Jose Mine from a distance with several workers in the foreground
Rescue efforts at San José Mine near Copiapó, Chile on 10 August 2010
Date5 August 2010 (2010-08-05)  – 13 October 2010 (2010-10-13)
(69 days)
Time14:05 CLT (UTC−4)
LocationAtacama Desert near Copiapó, Chile
Coordinates27°9′36.73″S 70°29′48.4″W / 27.1602028°S 70.496778°W / -27.1602028; -70.496778
First reporterSan Esteban Mining Company
OutcomeAll 33 trapped miners rescued by government
Deaths0
Non-fatal injuries0
Property damageTotal closure and loss as of August 2010[needs update]
InquiriesUnder investigation as of August 2010[needs update]
SuspectsUnder investigation as of August 2010[needs update]
ChargesUnder investigation as of August 2010[needs update]
ConvictionsUnder investigation as of August 2010[needs update]
LitigationUS$2 million lawsuit as of August 2010[needs update]
AwardsIn litigation as of August 2010[needs update]
WebsiteMinistry of Mining, Chile
Location of the Mina San José in Chile

The 2010 Copiapó mining accident, also known as the "Chilean mining accident" or "Los 33", began as a large cave-in on 5 August 2010 at the San José copper-gold mine in the Atacama Desert near Copiapó, Chile. The accident left 33 men trapped 700 meters (2,300 ft) below ground who survived underground for a record 69 days.[1][2] The San José Mine is about 45 kilometers (28 mi) north of Copiapó, in northern Chile.[3] The miners were trapped approximately 5 kilometers (3 mi) from the mine entrance. The mine had a history of instability that had led to previous accidents, including one death.[4][5][6]

Due to the fragility of the mine, it was originally thought the miners had not survived or would not be located before they died of starvation underground. A tremendous outpouring of sympathy for the plight of the miners and their families by the Chilean people, who had just gone through the 2010 Chile earthquake and tsunami less then six months earlier, caused the government to take over search and rescue operations from the company and to drill as many as eight exploratory boreholes as quickly as possible. On the 17th day after the accident, the miners were found alive when a note in bold red letters on a scrap of paper was found taped to a drill bit reading "Estamos bien en el refugio, los 33" (English: "We are okay in the shelter, the 33 [of us]").

Once the miners had been discovered alive, the rescuers began implementing a complex, comprehensive plan to both nurture and rescue the men trapped 700 meters (2,300 ft) below the earth that included three large drilling rig teams, nearly every ministry of the country, the expertise NASA and over a dozen international corporations. After 69 days trapped underground, all 33 men were rescued and brought to the surface on 13 October 2010 over a period of almost 24 hours. After the last trapped miner was winched to the surface, the rescue workers, all still underground, held up a sign before the camera reading "Misión cumplida Chile" (English: "Mission accomplished Chile") to the estimated more than 1 billion people watching the rescue on live television around the world.[7][8][9]

All 33 miners had been rescued, almost all in good medical condition, and expected to recover fully. Two miners were suffering from silicosis, one of whom also had pneumonia, and others were suffering from dental infections and corneal problems.[10] Three of the rescued miners had immediate surgery under general anesthesia for dental problems.[11] The total cost of the rescue operation was estimated at US$ 20 million, a third covered by private donations with the rest coming from state-owned mining corporation Codelco and the government itself.[12] Various lawsuits and investigations are still pending.


Background

Color satellite photo of the mine area in the Atacama desert.
Satellite image of the San José mine and its surroundings

Chile has a long tradition of mining, which developed during the 20th century and made the country the world's top producer of copper.[13] Since 2000, an average of 34 people have died every year in mining accidents in Chile, with a high of 43 in 2008, according to a review of data collected by the state regulatory agency National Geology and Mining Service Spanish: Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería de Chile abbreviated as SERNAGEOMIN).[14]

The mine is owned by San Esteban Mining Company, (Spanish: Compañía Minera San Esteban abbreviated as CMSE), a company with a notorious reputation for operating unsafe mines. According to an official with the non-profit Chilean Safety Association, (Spanish: Asociación Chilena de Seguridad, also known as ACHS) eight workers have died at the mine in 12 years.[3][5][15][16] Between 2004 and 2010, the company received 42 fines for breaching safety regulations.[5] The San Jose Mine was shut down in 2007 when relatives of a miner who had died in an accident sued company executives, but was reopened in 2008[4][5] despite failing to comply with all regulations, a matter which is still under investigation according to mining committee Senator Baldo Prokurica.[17] Due to budget constraints there were only three inspectors for the Atacama Region's 884 mines.[5]

CMSE had ignored warnings over unsafe working conditions in its mines. CMSE's management operates "without listening to the voice of the workers when they say that there is danger or risk," said Javier Castillo, secretary of the trade union that represents miners at the San José mine. "Nobody listens to us. Then they say we're right. If they would have believed the workers, we would not be lamenting this now," said Gerardo Núñez, head of the union at a nearby Candelaria Norte mine.[18]

Chilean copper mine workers are among the highest-paid miners in South America.[19] Although the accident itself has put into question mine safety in Chile, serious accidents in large mines are rare, particularly in those owned by the state copper mining company, Codelco, or by multinational companies.[20] However, smaller mines such as the one at San José have generally lower safety standards.[20] Mine workers at San Jose Mine were paid around 20% higher wages than at other Chilean mines due to its poor safety record.[10][20][21]

Accident

Initial information

Abstract graphic illustration of the underground accident site in the mine with markings, annotations and depths
Abstract diagram of the accident (not to scale; depths are meters AMSL)

The collapse occurred on 5 August 2010, at 14:00 CLT as reported by the owners, the San Esteban Mining Company (CMSE), the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare, the Chilean Undersecretary of Mining and the director of the SERNAGEOMIN (the National Mining and Geology Service).[22] The Oficina Nacional de Emergencias del Ministerio del Interior (ONEMI – National Emergencies Office of the Interior Ministry) reported that day the names of the 33 miners trapped in the mine",[23] including Franklin Lobos, a retired Chilean footballer.[22] One of the miners, Carlos Mamani, was Bolivian, the rest were Chilean.[24] The Chilean Minister of Mining Laurence Golborne was in Ecuador at the time of the disaster and arrived at the site on 7 August.[22]

When the cave-in occurred there were two groups of workers in the mine; one was near the entrance and escaped immediately without incident. A group of 33 men was deep inside the mine and included several subcontracted mechanics who would not normally have been with the group.[25] The rock fall caused a thick dust cloud that blinded the miners for up to six hours and caused lingering eye irritation and burning.[26]

Trapped group

The trapped miners initially tried to escape through a ventilation shaft system, but the ladders required by mining safety codes were missing. (The shafts later became inaccessible to rescue teams due to subsequent ground movements).[27] The company had failed to install the escape ladders which had been stipulated as a condition of restarting operations after authorities had closed the accident-plagued 100-year-old mine.[5] The mine's workings were reached by a long sloping roadway with many irregular spiral turns,[28] not by a vertical mineshaft.

The shift supervisor, Luis Urzúa, recognizing the gravity of the situation and the difficulty involved in any rescue attempt, gathered his men in a secure room called a "refuge" and organized the men and meager resources for long-term survival. Experienced miners were sent out to assess the situation, men with important skills were given key roles, and numerous other measures were taken to ensure the survival of the men.[29]

Search and rescue attempts

Ventilation shaft

Color image of President Piñera displaying the message in a plastic document protector sent by the miners with Mining Minister Golborne
President Piñera holds the message sent by the miners along side Mining Minister Golborne (red jacket, blue shirt)

Mine rescuers attempted to bypass the rockfall at the main entryway through alternative passages but each route was blocked by fallen rock or threatened by ongoing rock movement. A second collapse occurred at the mine on 7 August when rescuers were forced to use heavy machinery while trying to gain access via a ventilation shaft.[30] Out of concern that additional attempts pursuing this route would cause further geological movement within the mine, attempts to reach the trapped miners through previously existing shafts were halted and other means to find the men were sought.[31]

The accident followed closely on the heels of sharp criticism of the government's handling of the latest major Chilean earthquake and tsunami, and as a consequence of the worsening situation and increasing concern from the Chilean populace who were deeply sympathetic to the plight of the miners and their families, President Piñera returned to Chile early, before the start of the presidential inauguration of Juan Manuel Santos in Colombia, to travel to the mine.[32]

Exploratory boreholes

Percussion drills were used to make eight exploratory boreholes about 16 centimeters (6.3 in) wide to find the miners.[33] The rescue effort was complicated by out-of-date maps of the mine shafts and several boreholes drifting off-target[34] because of the extreme drilling depth and the notoriously hard rock that exacerbated the drill's tendency to drift.[35] On 19 August, the 14th day of the rescue operation, one of the probes reached a space where the miners were believed to be trapped but found no signs of life.[36] The search and rescue operation was led by Engineer André Sougarret, head of El Teniente Mine of Codelco, Chile's state owned copper corporation.[37]

Discovery

Image of hand written note in Spanish with red marker on a scrap of white paper, reading "Estamos bien en el refugio los 33" (English: "We are alright in the shelter, the 33")
Digital representation of the note sent by the miners (English: "We are alright in the shelter, the 33")

On 22 August at 07:15 CLT, the eighth borehole, drilled by TerraServices, using a Schramm T685 WS drill drilling a 6+12-inch (17 cm) hole, broke through.[38] It reached a ramp, at 688 meters (2,257 ft) underground, about 20 meters (66 ft) from an emergency shelter room where the miners were expected to have taken refuge.[39] The miners had heard the drills approaching for days and had prepared notes which they attached to the tip of the drill with insulation tape when it poked into their space. Though the drilling engineers had thought they heard tapping on the drill tip, they were surprised to discover the notes when the drill bit was pulled out, as the miners had survived for 17 days, much longer than anyone had expected.[40] At 15:17 CLDT, President Sebastián Piñera showed the media a note written on a piece of paper with a red marker that confirmed the miners were alive. The note read: "Estamos bien en el refugio los 33" (English: "We are alright in the shelter, the 33 [of us]"). Those words became an emblem of the miners' survival and the rescue effort, appearing on websites, banners and t-shirts.[41] Hours later, video cameras sent down the borehole made contact with the trapped miners, capturing the first grainy, black-and-white, silent images of the skinny, dirty, shirtless and unshaven men.[42]

Survival

Partially out of focus, black and white video capture of first view of face of one of the trapped miners
This iconic image was the world's first view of the trapped miners after a video camera was lowered down the borehole.

The miners had a 50 square meters (540 sq ft) emergency shelter with two long benches,[43] but ventilation problems had led them to move out to a tunnel.[44] In addition to the shelter, they had some 2 kilometers (1.2 mi) of galleries in which to move around.[26] Food supplies were limited and the men had lost an average of 8 kilograms (18 lb) each by the time they were discovered.[44] Although the emergency supplies were intended for only two or three days, the miners rationed them and were able to make them last for two weeks, running out just before they were discovered.[45]

After his release from the hospital, Mario Sepúlveda said "All 33 trapped miners, practicing a one-man, one-vote democracy, worked together to maintain the mine, look for escape routes and keep up morale." He said, "We knew that if society broke down we would all be doomed. Each day a different person took a bad turn. Every time that happened, we worked as a team to try to keep the morale up." He and some of the older miners helped to support the younger men, he said, but all have taken an oath of silence not to reveal certain details of what occurred down the mine, particularly during the early weeks of desperation.[46]

Videos sent to the surface

slightly grainy color video capture image showing the dirty and sweaty, slightly malnourished condition of the miners
Video capture image showing the condition of the miners after 17 days trapped below ground

In late August the miners filmed a 40 minute video, recorded by a mini-camera sent by the government through the palomas, in which 28 of the 33 miners appeared. The video demonstrated that most of them were in good spirits and reasonably good health, though they had all lost weight.[47]

The men were seen to be mainly bare chested, bearded, and all were covered with a sheen of sweat from the high heat and humidity of the mine at that depth. Several of the miners looked to be very thin and some were camera shy. The host, Sepúlveda, avoided specifics about the health of the men and used the vaguer term "complicated" to refer to their situation. He did however work to maintain an upbeat attitude and insisted that things were looking brighter for the trapped men.[47] The video generally portrays a positive, light atmosphere. [47]

Leadership

"It's been a bit of a long shift," said the foreman whose level-headedness and gentle humor helped keep the miners under his charge focused on survival during their 70-day underground ordeal. Luis Urzúa kept his cool. In his first audio contact with officials on the surface, he glossed over the hunger and despair he and his men had felt, saying instead: "We're fine, waiting for you to rescue us."[48][49][50]

Urzúa credited majority decision-making for the trapped men's good esprit de corps and dedication to their common goal . "You just have to speak the truth and believe in democracy," said Urzúa. "Everything was voted on ... We were 33 men, so 16 plus one was a majority."[48]

With the honor of beleaguered ship's captains over the ages, 54-year-old Urzúa was the last man out after 70 long days trapped below the Atacama desert. Following the collapse of the mine on 5 August, the leader dispatched men to find out what had happened and see if it was possible to escape but they could not find an exit route. "We were trying to find out what we could do and what we could not," said Urzúa. "Then we had to figure out the food." Urzúa tried to instill a philosophical acceptance of fate so they could accept their situation and move on to embrace the essential tasks of survival.[49]

Key members of the trapped group

  • Luis Urzúa (54), the shift foreman trapped with the men, recognizing the gravity of the situation and the difficulty of any rescue attempt, gathered the men in a secure room called a "refuge", and organized the men and meager resources for a long-term survival situation.[51][52] Just after the incident, he led three men to scout up the tunnel, confirming the situation, he then made detailed maps of the area to aid the rescue effort. He led the underground portion of the rescue operation coordinating closely with the surface engineers over the teleconference links[53][54]
  • Florencio Ávalos (31), second in command of the group, assisted Urzúa organizing the men. Because of his experience, physical fitness and emotional stability, he was selected to be the first miner to ride the rescue capsule to the surface in case of complications during the 15 minute ascent in the claustrophobic shaft. Naturally shy, he served as the video communications camera operator for the videos sent up to their families. He was trapped along with his younger brother Renan.[54]
  • Yonni Barrios (50), became the medic of the trapped miners, monitoring their health, giving vaccinations, and giving detailed medical reports to the team of doctors on the surface. His fellow miners jokingly referred to him as "Dr. House" from the popular American TV medical drama.[35][52]
  • Mario Gómez (63), was the eldest miner and became the religious leader in the group, organizing a chapel with a shrine containing statues of saints, and aided the surface psychologists' counseling efforts.[52][54]
  • José Henríquez (54), a preacher who has also worked in mining for 33 years, he served as the miners' pastor and organized daily prayers.[54]
  • Mario Sepúlveda (40), served as the energetic host of the miner's video journals that were sent to the surface to reassure the world that they were doing well. The local media dubbed him "Super Mario" after the Super Mario Bros. video game for his energy, wit and humor.[54][55][56]
  • Ariel Ticona (29), served as the group's communications specialist, maintaining the underground portion of the telephone and videoconferencing systems that were sent down by the surface team.[54]

Health of the trapped miners

a color photograph of the topside opening of one of the two narrow tubes and hardware used to deliver supplies to the miners 2,000 feet below
One of the two tubes used to deliver supplies to the miners 2,000 ft below

On 23 August, voice contact was made with the miners. The doctors also reported that the miners had already been provided with a 5% glucose solution and a drug to prevent stomach ulcers resulting from food deprivation.[57] Material was sent down in 5-foot-long (1.5 m) blue plastic capsules nicknamed [palomas] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) ("doves", referring to the role of carrier pigeons), taking an hour to reach the miners.[43][58][58] Delivery of solid food began a few days later.[58][59][59] Relatives were permitted to write letters, but were asked to keep them optimistic.[43]

Out of concern for the miners' morale, rescuers hesitated to tell them that according to the conservative plan, the rescue might take months, with an eventual extraction date close to Christmas. The miners were fully informed, however, on 25 August, of the projected timeline for their rescue and the complexity of the plans to get them out. The mining minister reported that the men took the potentially negative news very well.[60]

Rescue workers and consultants described the miners as a very disciplined group.[35] Psychologists and doctors worked with the rescue effort to ensure the miners kept busy and mentally focused.[58][59] The miners affirmed their ability to participate in rescue efforts, saying "There are a large number of professionals who are going to help in the rescue efforts from down here."[61] Psychologists believed that the miners should have a role in their own destiny as it was important to maintain motivation and optimism.[61][61][62][63][64][65]

Sanitation was an important issue in their hot, humid environment, and the miners took steps to maintain hygiene throughout their confinement.[66]

Environmental and safety issues were also a primary concern.[66]

Health Minister Jaime Mañalich stated, "The situation is very similar to the one experienced by astronauts who spend months on end in the space station."[67] On 31 August, a team from NASA in the United States arrived in Chile to provide assistance. The team included two physicians, one psychologist, and an engineer.[68]

After the rescue, Dr. Rodrigo Figueroa, chief of the Trauma Stress and Disaster unit of the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, said there were serious shortcomings in the censorship of letters to and from their relatives above ground and in the monitoring of activities the miners could undertake, as being underground has suddenly turned them into "babies", he said. But the natural strength of "The 33" managed to keep them alive, and their natural organization into teams as a response to disaster was also part of the human response to threat. And as the miners' sound minds have seen them through, they will continue to be tested as they now resume life above ground.[69]

Religious aspects

A color photo of a priest offering mass in a white tent with dirt floor for the workers and family members at San Jose Mine
Mass for the family members in Campamento Esperanza at San José Mine near Copiapó, Chile

The trapped miners, most of whom were Catholic, asked for religious items, including Bibles, crucifixes, rosaries, and statues of the Virgin Mary and other saints.[70] Pope Benedict XVI sent each man a rosary which was brought personally to the mine by the archbishop of Santiago, Cardinal Francisco Javier Errázuriz Ossa.[71] After three weeks in the mine, one man who was civilly married to his wife 25 years earlier asked her to enter into a sacramental marriage.[72] The men set up a makeshift chapel in the mine, and Mario Gómez, the eldest miner, spiritually counseled his companions and led daily prayers.[70]

Among the miners, a number attributed religious significance to the events. Mario Sepúlveda, for example, said "I was with God, and with the Devil -- and God took me."[70] Mónica Ávalos, the wife of the first man rescued, Florencio Ávalos, noted: "We are really religious, both my husband and I, so God was always present. It is a miracle, this rescue was so difficult, it's a grand miracle."[73] As one story in the Daily Mail put it "A deep religious faith powered this rescue; miners and families and rescuers alike believe their prayers were answered."[74]

Both government representatives and the Chilean public have repeatedly credited Divine Providence with keeping the miners alive and the Chilean public has viewed rescue as a miracle.[75] Chile's president Sebastián Piñera stated, "When the first miner emerges safe and sound, I hope all the bells of all the churches of Chile ring out forcefully, with joy and hope. Faith has moved mountains."[75] When Esteban Rojas stepped out of the rescue device, he immediately knelt on the ground with his hands together in prayer then raised his arms above him in adoration.[76] His wife then wrapped around him a religious tapestry with Mary on it as they hugged and cried.[76]

Tent city and the families

[Campamento Esperanza] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) (Camp Hope) was a tent city that sprang up in the desert as word of the collapse traveled. At first, relatives gathered at the mine entrance and slept in cars as they waited and prayed for word on rescue operation's progress. In the weeks that the search extended, friends brought them tents and other camping supplies for shelter from the harsh desert climate. The encampment grew larger with the arrival of friends and relatives, additional rescue and construction workers, and members of the media. Government ministers held regular briefings for the families and journalists at the camp. "We're not going to abandon this camp until we go out with the last miner left," said María Segovia. "There are 33 of them, and one is my brother."[77][78]

Many among the miner's families at Camp Hope are devout members of the Catholic Church and prayed nearly constantly for the men.[79] As they waited, the worried families erected memorials for the trapped men, lit candles and prayed. On a nearby hill overlooking the mine, the families placed 32 Chilean and one Bolivian flag to represent their stranded men. Small shrines were erected at the foot of each flag and amongst the tents with pictures of their miners, religious icons and statues of the Virgin Mary and patron saints.[80]

María Segovia, the elder sister of Darío Segovia, became known as [La Alcaldesa] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) (the Mayoress) for her organizational skills and outspokenness[81] and as the families became more organized, the government took steps to provide some comforts. Eventually the government provided a more private area for the relatives to avoid the constant inquisitions from the energetic press corps, and infrastructure was added such as a kitchen, canteen area, sanitary facilities and security. Bulletin boards sprouted and the local government established shuttle bus stops. Over time even a school house and children's zones were added and volunteers worked to help feed the families, clowns entertained the children and organizations provided emotional and spiritual comfort to the families waiting in limbo.[82] Police and soldiers were brought in from Santiago to help maintain order and security, some patrolling the desert perimeter on horseback and it became in many respects, a small city.[83][84]

Rescue plans

A watercolor painting of the Dahlbusche Bomb, the 1963 precedecessor of the phoenix used in Wunder von Lengede
Miner rescued with a Dahlbusch Bomb, the 1963 predecessor of the Fénix, Wunder von Lengede, artist depiction (1963) by Helmuth Ellgaard

The trapped miners had been found with exploratory bore holes and several of these bore holes were now being used to supply the men logistically. The Chilean government began to develop a comprehensive rescue plan modeled after the successful 2002 US Quecreek Mine Rescue operation which was in turn based on the 1963 German Wunder von Lengede rescue operation. Both previous rescues used a "rescue pod" or capsule to winch trapped miners one-by-one to the surface. The rescue crews planned to use at least three drilling technologies to drill bore holes wide enough to raise the miners with custom designed rescue pods as quickly as possible. "The mine is old and there is concern of further collapses," Murray & Roberts Cementation managing director Henry Laas said. "The rescue methodology therefore has to be carefully designed and implemented."[85]

Drilling plans

Several types of drilling equipment provided by multiple international corporations and three different access strategies were employed in parallel to reach the miners with large escape boreholes. When the first (and only) escape shaft reached the miners, there were three plans in operation:

  1. Plan A, the Strata 950 (702 meter target depth at 90°),
  2. Plan B, the Schramm T130XD (638 meter target depth at 82°),
  3. Plan C, a RIG-421 drill (597 meter target depth at 85°).[86]

Plan A

Used an Australian built Strata 950 model raise borer[87] type drilling rig often used to create circular shafts between two levels of a mine without the use of explosives. The drill was provided by South African mining company Murray & Roberts, who had a recently idled machine in Chile from a separate mining contract. The drill had just finished a shaft for Codelco's Andina copper mine in Chile and was immediately transferred to San José Mine. Since it weighed 31 short tons (28 t), it needed to be shipped in pieces involving a large truck convoy. The Strata 950 was the first of the three drills to begin boring an escape shaft. If the pilot hole had been completed, further drilling would have caused rock debris to fall down the hole, and the miners would have had to remove the debris.[88][89]

Plan B

Involved an American manufactured Schramm Inc. T130XD air core, mobile drill owned by Geotec S.A. (a Chilean-American joint venture drilling company) that was chosen by the general contractor of Plan B to widen one of the three existing 5.5 inches (14 cm) boreholes that were previously keeping the miners supplied logistically with palomas. Internationally, the drills are routinely used to drill top holes for the oil and gas industry as well as for mineral exploration and production of water wells The percussion-technology hammer drill could drill at more than 40 meters (130 ft) a day by using four hammers instead of one.[85][90][91][92]

Its first delay was caused by the special bit hitting a metal bar in an older area of the mine and wrecking.[28] The destroyed drill bit was retrieved by sending down a steel tube called a "spider" whose end was cut into 8 long teeth. The second delay was caused by the replacement drill bit wearing out. As the drill bore down, tons of spoil fell down the pilot hole and the trapped miners had to clear it away, using a front loader, fueled with diesel sent down via one of the supply holes.

Plan C

2010 Copiapó mining accident
Drilling Results
Plan A, Strata 950  (85%)
702
598


Plan B, Schramm T130  (100%)
624


Plan C, RIG-421  (62%)
597
372

Referred to a powerful Canadian made RIG-421 oil drilling rig operated by Calgary-based Precision Drilling Corporation and was the last drill to be added to the rescue process. It began drilling on Sept. 19.[85] The rig is a special drill used for oil and gas drilling that theoretically could drill a wide enough escape shaft in a single pass without a pilot hole. RIG-421 is a Diesel-Electric Triple that was 43 meters (141 ft) tall and needed 40 truckloads to bring its pieces from Iquique, Chile to Copiapó. It was chosen for the rescue operation because it can drill large holes deep into the ground and because it works faster than mining drills. [85][93] This drill suffered major setbacks due to the difficulty of aiming the larger drill at such a small target and the hardness of the rock which caused the drill to wander from its intended course. The drill then needed to be removed, resized and repositioned, which slowed its progress. Many family members of the miners once had high hopes for this Canadian rig, but it had to reduce its drill size and lagged behind.[85][94][95]

Drilling results

Plan B's Schramm T130XD reached the trapped miners first at 08:05 CLDT on 9 October.[96] By 8 October, the Plan A Strata 950's pilot hole had reached 598 meters (1,962 ft) deep (85%—it had not yet started its widened shaft). Plan C's RIG-421, the only machine at the site which drills a shaft wide enough immediately, reached 372 meters (1,220 ft) (62%).[85][97]

The rescue operation was an international effort. The rescue of the miners involved not only technology, but the cooperation and resources of companies and individuals from around the world, including Latin America, South Africa, Australia, the United States and Canada. NASA specialists helped develop a sophisticated health agenda. Though international participation was critical, overall, it was a Chilean-led team and effort. As one NASA specialist said while visiting early on in the rescue: "The Chileans are basically writing the book."[85]

Extraction plans

Fénix rescue capsule

A color diagram depicting the capsule with a miner and text describing the features of the pod
Diagram of the rescue capsule "Fenix" class and the miner equipment used in the Copiapó accident of 2010 rescue.

While the three separate drills pushed downward, technicians were building the rescue capsules that would eventually carry the miners to safety.[26][98][99][60][85] Several major online news media organizations produced illustrations of the capsules' basic design.[100][101][102]

The steel rescue capsules, dubbed Fénix (English: Phoenix) were constructed by the Chilean Navy with design help from NASA. The Chilean Navy incorporated most of NASA's suggestions and produced three rescue pods, named Fénix 1, 2 and 3 respectively; these were enhanced versions of the Dahlbusch Bomb. Fénix 1 was presented to journalists and the miners' relatives to try out for size.[85][103][104]

The capsule in which the 33 men were rescued was the Fénix 2. The capsule was 54 centimeters (21 in) in diameter,[105] narrow enough to avoid hitting the sides of the tunnel and with retractable wheels to allow for a smoother ride to the surface. It had an oxygen supply, lighting, video and voice communications, a reinforced roof to protect against rock falls, and an escape hatch with a safety device to allow the passenger to lower himself back down if the capsule became stuck.[85][105]

Extraction preparation

Although the drilling was completed on 9 October 2010, Laurence Golborne, Chilean Minister of Mining, announced that the rescue operation was not expected to begin before 12 October because multiple steps had to be taken to prepare both the escape shaft and the site for the extraction system. [106] These tasks included the inspection of the borehole to determine how much needed to be encased with steel pipes to prevent rockfalls from jamming the escape capsule and the installation of steel pipes which, depending on how much casing the shaft required, could take up to 96 hours. Once the shaft was safely lined with pipe, pouring a large concrete platform for the winching rig to raise and lower the capsule, assembly of the winching rig and then finally thorough testing of the capsule and winching system together.

Golborne also indicated he expected only the first 100–200 meters (330–660 ft) of the shaft to be encased, a task that could be performed in only 10 hours.[107] At the end, only the first 56 meters (184 ft) were deemed to require encasing. Assembly of a safe lifting system took an additional 48 hours.[108]

Shortly before the extraction phase began, Golborne told reporters at the mine that rescuers estimated it would take about an hour to bring each miner to the surface and thus he expected the lifting phase of the rescue operation to take up to 48 hours.[109]

Rescue Operation San Lorenzo

Color image of the first rescuer with the Chilean President and fellow rescue workers before entering the rescue capsuleále
Manuel González , the first rescuer, is preparing to descend into the San José Mine, during "Operación San Lorenzo".

The mine rescue effort to retrieve the miners began on Tuesday, 12 October at 19:00 CLDT and was dubbed Operación San Lorenzo (Operation St. Lawrence) after the patron saint of miners whose statue at Copiapó's church bears a miner's helmet.[80][110][111] The first rescuer lowered to the miners was Manuel González, an experienced rescue expert and employee of mining company Codelco, at 23:18 CLDT, following a three-hour delay for final safety tests.[112] During the 18 minute descent, the waiting families and surface rescue team members sang the Canción Nacional (Chile's national anthem). González arrived in the collapsed mine and made contact with the miners at 23:36.

Extraction

Even though Chilean officials played down the risks of the rescue, the miners needed to be alert during the ascent in case something went wrong. Therefore, the rescue plan indicated that the first four miners to travel up the narrow shaft were to be those "deemed the fittest of body and mind".[113] They could best tell the rescue team about the conditions of the journey and of the remaining miners. After the initial four, the rescues proceeded in order of health, with the least healthy men brought from the mine first.[114]

Procedure

Six hours before his rescue, each miner switched to a purely liquid diet rich in sugars, minerals and potassium as recommended by NASA.[115] Miners also used a girdle around the waist to maintain stable blood pressure, and took an aspirin to avert formation of blood clots.[116] Each miner was strapped into a harness inside the 21 inches (53 cm) wide bullet-shaped capsule wearing green moisture-resistant coveralls[117] and sunglasses[118] to avoid retinal damage from initial exposure to harsh lighting on the surface. The capsule included oxygen masks, heart monitors, and video cameras.[104] Once the miner was secure inside the capsule it then ascended at a rate of 1 meter per second (2.2 mph), with an estimated travel time of 9 to 18 minutes. When the capsule surfaced a doctor approached it to check for the miner's alertness. The miner was then helped out of the capsule, was immediately reunited with a a small group of close family members and received a round of applause from rescue workers, family members and observers. Each miner was personally greeted by President Piñera and many by his wife as well throughout the 24 hour long operation. After this the miners were laid on a stretcher and taken to a field hospital for initial evaluation.[117] As none of them needed immediate emergency treatment, each was transferred by ambulance to an office building, still on the mine premises, for a private reunion with close family members. Finally, the miners were transferred in groups of 4 by helicopter to Copiapó Hospital, 60 kilometers (37 mi) away, for a 24–48 hour period of medical observation and treatment. As the previously rescued miners received medical treatment, the capsule repeated its descent to lift the next miner to the surface.[117]

Rescue

Color image of the mining leader and the Chilean President leading the rescue workers on the surface at night in a rendition of the Chilean anthem
Luis Urzúa, the leader of the trapped miners and the last of the 33 to be lifted to freedom, celebrates with President Piñera at San José Mine, during "Operación San Lorenzo".

The original plan was for the capsule to return to the surface empty after delivering the first rescue worker, to deliver a second rescuer to the mine before bringing the first miner to the surface. However, to avoid delay, rescuers decided to send a miner to the surface in the capsule returning after González was sent down. (The capsule had completed an "empty" trial run the previous day, stopping just 15 meters (49 ft) before the end of the shaft.)[119]

The capsule was quickly rechecked for safety and, after 15 minutes, miner Florencio Ávalos began his ascent from the mine; the scene was filmed live from inside the mine and from the surface and broadcast worldwide. The mine's shift supervisor, Luis Urzúa (54), whose disciplined leadership was credited with keeping the men alive on an emergency food supply during their first 17 days without contact from the outside world, was the last miner to make the journey. [120]

Each transit of the capsule (down or up) was projected to take 15 minutes,[121] for a total time of 33 hours for the entire rescue operation; however, after the capsule's first few transits, it became apparent that the trip might take somewhat less than the projected 15 minutes and each rescue cycle less than 1 hour. As the eighteenth miner was brought to the surface, Chilean Mining Minister Laurence Golborne stated "We have advanced at a faster time than we originally planned. I foresee we might conclude the whole operation before tonight."[122]

Luis Urzúa, after stepping free from the rescuers, greeting his son and then embracing President Piñera said, "I've delivered to you this shift of workers, as we agreed I would". The president replied, "I gladly receive your shift, because you completed your duty, leaving last like a good captain." President Piñera went on to say "You are not the same after this, and Chile won't be the same either."[123]

During the rescue, a large Chilean flag was hung in the mine chamber; Luis Urzúa brought it up with him. After all the miners had been extracted, the rescuers in the mine chamber displayed a banner reading "Misión cumplida Chile" ("Mission accomplished Chile").[124] Manuel González was the first rescuer down and the last up, spending 25 hours 14 minutes in the mine. Rescuers who needed to sleep did so in the mine to avoid delaying the rescue by using capsule journeys. After the last rescuer was out, President Piñera personally covered the top of the rescue shaft with a metal lid. Fénix 2 made 39 round trips, traveling about 50 kilometers (31 mi).[125]

Order of miners and rescuers

Slightly grainy color video capture image of the six rescuers displaying the famous "Mision Cumplida Chile" sign deep within San José Mine near Copiapo, Chile [126]
The iconic image of the six rescuers displaying the famous "Mision Cumplida CHILE" (Mission Complete Chile) sign in San José Mine near Copiapo, Chile[126]

Before the rescue, the trapped miners were classified into three main groups to determine the exit order, first to last: "hábiles" (skilled), "lábiles" (weak) and "fuertes" (strong).[127] In theory, the first ones to exit should be those more skilled and in the best physical condition, because in the case of any problem (capsule malfunction or collapse of the shaft), they would be capable of an unaided escape from the bottom of the capsule or be able to communicate clearly any other inconvenience to the rescue team on the surface. The second group included miners with medical problems, older men and those with psychological issues. The final group comprised the most mentally tough, as they had to be able to endure the anxiety of the wait;[128] in the words of Minister Mañalich "they don't care to stay another 24 hours inside the mine".

The exit order was as shown below. The penultimate miner rescued, Ariel Ticona, was tasked with communications. The last, Luis Urzúa, a surveyor, was the shift foreman on the day of the collapse and the group leader during the confinement.[129]

Rescued miners (click "show" to expand the table)
Order Rescued Miner's name Age[130] Rescue time (CLDT)[8][9] Cycle time[131] Comments[54]
1 Florencio Ávalos 31 13 October 00:11 0:51 Video camera operator for the videos sent up to families. He had helped to get his brother Renan a job in the mine.
2 Mario Sepúlveda 40 13 October 01:10 1:00 An electrical specialist known as "the presenter" because he acted as a spokesman and guide on videos that the miners made. He ended one video with "Over to you in the studio."
3 Juan Andrés Illanes 52 13 October 02:07 0:57 A former Chilean Army corporal who served in the Beagle Conflict, a border dispute with Argentina.
4 Carlos Mamani 24 13 October 03:11 1:04 The only Bolivian among the 33, the heavy machinery operator; he moved to Chile a decade ago.
5 Jimmy Sánchez 19 13 October 04:11 1:00 He was given the responsibility of checking air quality.[132] The youngest man trapped; he had only been a miner for five months. He has a baby daughter.
6 Osmán Araya 30 13 October 05:35 1:24 In a video message he told his wife and baby daughter Britany: "I will fight to the end to be with you."
7 José Ojeda 46 13 October 06:22 0:47 Penned the famous note "Estamos bien en el refugio los 33" ("We are okay in the refuge, the 33 of us") which was discovered attached to a probe 17 days after the mine collapse.[133] A grandfather who suffers from kidney problems and has been on medication for diabetes.
8 Claudio Yáñez 34 13 October 07:04 0:42 A drill operator. His longterm partner Cristina Núñez accepted his proposal while he was underground.
9 Mario Gómez 63* 13 October 08:00 0:56 The eldest of the trapped miners, he had been thinking of retirement in November. (Note: *Multiple reliable sources have reported his age as between 60 and 65.)
10 Álex Vega 31 13 October 08:53 0:53 Suffers from kidney problems and hypertension. Had worked in the mine for nine years.
11 Jorge Galleguillos 56 13 October 09:31 0:38 Suffers from hypertension
12 Edison Peña 34 13 October 10:13 0:42 The group's song leader, he requested that Elvis Presley songs be sent down into the mine. The fittest miner, he had reportedly been running 10 km a day while underground. He ran in the 2010 New York City Marathon
13 Carlos Barrios 27 13 October 10:55 0:42 A part-time miner who also drives a taxi and likes horse racing. He was said to be unhappy with interference from psychologists.
14 Víctor Zamora 33 13 October 11:32 0:37 A mechanic who only went into the mine on the day of the collapse to fix a vehicle. He was also a victim of the Chile earthquake in February 2010.
15 Víctor Segovia 48 13 October 12:08 0:36 An electrician and father of four who told his family: "This hell is killing me. When I sleep I dream we are in an oven."
16 Daniel Herrera 27 13 October 12:50 0:42 Truck driver, was given the role of medical assistant in the mine.
17 Omar Reygadas 56 13 October 13:39 0:49 A bulldozer operator whose children have been keeping a diary of their life above ground on BBC News.
18 Esteban Rojas 44 13 October 14:49 1:10 Told his longtime partner Jessica Yáñez that he will marry her in a church as soon as he gets out.
19 Pablo Rojas 45 13 October 15:28 0:39 He had worked in the mine for less than six months when the accident happened. His brother Esteban was trapped with him.
20 Darío Segovia 48 13 October 15:59 0:31 A drill operator, he is a son of a miner, and his father was once trapped for a week. His sister María led prayers at Camp Hope.
21 Yonni Barrios 50 13 October 16:31 0:32 Served as the group medic and supervised their medical care.
22 Samuel Ávalos 43 13 October 17:04 0:33 A father-of-three who had worked in the mine for five months.
23 Carlos Bugueño 27 13 October 17:33 0:29 Friends with fellow trapped miner Pedro Cortez.
24 José Henríquez 54 13 October 17:59 0:26 A preacher who has worked in mining for 33 years, he had become the miners' pastor and organized daily prayers.
25 Renán Ávalos 29 13 October 18:24 0:25 Trapped along with his older brother Florencio.
26 Claudio Acuña 44 13 October 18:51 0:27 Had his birthday in the mine on September 9.
27 Franklin Lobos 53 13 October 19:18 0:27 A well known former football player known as the "magic mortar".
28 Richard Villarroel 27 13 October 19:45 0:27 The mechanic had worked in the mine for two years
29 Juan Carlos Aguilar 49 13 October 20:13 0:28 A married father of one.
30 Raúl Bustos 40 13 October 20:37 0:24 A hydraulics engineer, was a victim of the February earthquake in Chile. He moved north, finding work at the mine to support his wife and two children.
31 Pedro Cortez 26 13 October 21:02 0:25 Went to school near the mine. He and his friend Carlos Bugueno, who was also trapped, started work there at the same time.
32 Ariel Ticona 29 13 October 21:30 0:28 The group's communications specialist. His wife gave birth to a daughter on Sept 14 and he could watch the arrival on video. He named her Esperanza, which means "Hope".
33 Luis Urzúa 54 13 October 21:55 0:25 The shift foreman, known as Don Lucho by other miners, took a leading role while they were trapped and he made more accurate maps of their cave for the rescue crews.

Note: Early in the disaster, the Chilean newspaper El Mercurio published a widely circulated, but incorrect, early list of the miners' names with two errors: it omitted Esteban Rojas and Claudio Acuña and wrongly included the names of Roberto López Bordones and William Órdenes. The list above is correct and up to date according to the Ministry of Mining website.[134]

Rescue workers who descended (click "show" to expand the table)
Order Descended Rescue worker[135][136][137] Affiliation[137][138] Descent time (CLDT)[136] Extraction time (CLDT)[136] Time spent inside mine[136] Cycle time[136][139] Down trip no.[136]
1. Manuel González El Teniente Mine 12 October 23:18 14 October 00:32 25:14 0:27 1
2. Roberto Ríos, Sgt Chilean Marine Corps 13 October 00:16 14 October 00:05 23:49 0:23 2
3. Patricio Robledo, Cpl Chilean Marine Corps 13 October 01:18 13 October 23:42 22:24 0:25 3
4. Jorge Bustamante El Teniente Mine 13 October 10:22 13 October 23:17 12:55 0:24 13
5. Patricio Sepúlveda, Cpl GOPE (national police medic) 13 October 12:14 13 October 22:53 10:39 0:23 16
6. Pedro Rivero Carola Mine 13 October 19:23 13 October 22:30 3:07 0:35 28

Notes:

  1. The extraction times for the rescuers are correct but may be out of order and not listed next to the actual corresponding rescue worker
  2. "Down trip no." is the number of the capsule journey that he was sent down on

Timeline of events

This is a general chronology of the events, from the beginning:

  • 5 August 2010 (2010-08-05): Rock-fall at the San José mine in Atacama Desert in northern Chile leaves 33 gold and copper miners trapped 2,300 feet below ground.
  • 7 August 2010 (2010-08-07): Second collapse hampers rescue efforts and blocks access to lower parts of the mine. Rescuers begin drilling boreholes to send down listening devices.
  • 22 August 2010 (2010-08-22): 17 days after the first collapse, a note is found attached to one of the probes, saying: "All 33 of us are well inside the shelter." The miners were in a shelter having lunch when the first collapse occurred, and had survived on rations. Food, medical supplies, clothes and bedding began to be sent down the borehole.
  • 27 August 2010 (2010-08-27): The miners send first video greetings to the surface.
  • 30 August 2010 (2010-08-30): First attempt to drill a hole to rescue the men, Plan A, begins.
  • 5 September 2010 (2010-09-05): Plan B drilling begins.
  • 18 September 2010 (2010-09-18): Miners celebrate Chilean Bicentennial holiday underground.[140]
  • 19 September 2010 (2010-09-19): Plan C drilling begins.
  • 24 September 2010 (2010-09-24): Miners had now been trapped underground for 50 days, longer than anyone else in history.
  • 9 October 2010 (2010-10-09): Plan B drill breaks through to the miners' workshop.
  • 11 October 2010 (2010-10-11): "Fénix 2" rescue capsule is tested to ensure that it can pass up and down the newly completed shaft.
  • 12 October 2010 (2010-10-12): Rescue begins at 23:20 CLDT.
  • 13 October 2010 (2010-10-13): Last of the 33 miners is brought up to the surface and rescued, at 21:56 CLDT.[30]
  • 14 October 2010 (2010-10-14): First 3 miners released from hospital.
  • 15 October 2010 (2010-10-15): 28 more miners released from hospital, 2 remain for further treatment; dental and psychological follow-up.
  • 16 October 2010 (2010-10-16): Mario Sepúlveda was discharged from hospital after additional psychological tests.
  • 19 October 2010 (2010-10-19): Víctor Zamora released from hospital after having serious dental surgery.[141]
  • 25 October 2010 (2010-10-25): The rescued miners were honored at "La Moneda" presidential palace, met with President Sebastián Piñera, posed for pictures with the "Fénix 2" capsule and played a friendly game of football against a team from the rescuers at the "Estadio Nacional"(football) (National Football Stadium).[142]
  • 13 December 2010 (2010-12-13): 26 of the rescued miners, including Franklin Lobos, went on invitation to a Manchester United training session at Carrington, Greater Manchester in England.[143]

Reaction to the rescue

Color image of Chilean President Piñera and First Lady present a souvenir gift rock from the San Jose Mine to Queen Elizabeth II on 18 October 2010 during a state visit to the UK
President Piñera and First Lady present a souvenir rock from the mine to Queen Elizabeth II on 18 October 2010.

Chilean President Sebastián Piñera and First Lady Cecilia Morel were present during the rescue. Bolivian President Evo Morales was also scheduled to be on location for the rescue but did not arrive in time for the rescue of the trapped Bolivian miner, Carlos Mamani.[144] A number of foreign leaders contacted Piñera to express solidarity and pass on congratulations to Chile while the rescue efforts were ongoing, including the Presidents of Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Peru, South Africa, Uruguay, Venezuela,[145][146] and Poland,[147] and Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom,[148] Ireland, (who also wrote personally to the Chilean president and the Clare-based designers and manufacturers of the rescue drill),[149] and of Spain. Other foreign leaders including President of Mexico, Felipe Calderón[150] and U.S. President Barack Obama[150][151] praised the rescue efforts and passed on their hopes and prayers to the miners and their families. Pope Benedict XVI left a video message in Spanish praying for the success of the rescue operation.[152]

After all the miners were rescued, Piñera gave a speech on location in which he was effusive in his praise of Chile and said he was "proud to be the president of all Chileans." He invoked Chile's recently passed Bicentennial celebrations and said the miners were rescued with "unity, hope and faith." He also thanked Chávez and Morales, amongst others, for their calls of support and solidarity. He said those who forced the rescue (i.e. those responsible for the collapse of the mine) would be punished, and said there would be a "new deal" with the workers.[153][154]

Miners post-rescue

By 19 October, all 33 of the men had been released from the hospital. All but two of the men were released to go home within 48 hours of the rescue; Mario Sepúlveda remained hospitalized for further psychological evaluation because of concerns that he had not yet adapted to life outside the mine but was released on 16 October.[155] Meanwhile, Víctor Zamora remained for additional treatment of a dental infection and was released on 19 October.[156][141]

Health concerns

Color image of President Piñera visiting the rescued miners who are dressed in hospital robes and pajamas while seated and standing in a semi-circle in a hospital room
President Piñera visiting the rescued miners in Copiapó Hospital in October 2010

Their doctors marveled at how well the men had coped physically with their time underground, but the media frenzy surrounding the men since their return concerned the Chilean Health Minister, Jaime Mañalich. He requested that the media treat the miners "with dignity and respect", and went on to say they needed "rest and repose" so they have the chance to come to terms with the events of the last 70 days. "They are still on an emotional roller-coaster". The medical team's psychologist, Alberto Iturra, warned that the miners were exhausted. "When that happens, your sensitivity rises to the maximum at the same time as your tolerance falls to almost nothing". Regardless, President Piñera challenged the men to a friendly soccer game and invited them to state functions including a visit to the presidential palace and the grand opening of a transcontinental highway.[157]

Marc Siegel, an associate professor of medicine at the NYU Langone Medical Center, said that lack of sunlight could potentially cause problems with muscles, bones and other organs. Jane Aubin, scientific director of the Institute of Musculoskeletal Health and Arthritis at the Canadian Institute for Health Research, said the miners will have to be monitored closely. "They haven't been as physically active as you would want [them] to be, so they have undoubtedly experienced some muscle loss," she said. "Probably after that extended period of time, in both a confined space and in relative darkness, they've also probably experienced some bone loss."[158] The team of psychologists who spoke to the miners daily in the mine will continue to follow their progress.

Officials considered canceling plans for a thanksgiving mass for the men and their families at Campamento Esperanza, on 17 October, because of fears that a premature return to the site could be damaging. "It's not a good idea that they go back to the mine so soon," said Iturra.[156] Dr Jorge Díaz, head of the miners' medical team at Copiapó regional hospital said "We have a group of workers who are absolutely normal people, they weren't selected from a group of applicants to be astronauts, nor were they people who underwent rigorous tests, therefore we don't know when the post-traumatic stress syndrome can appear."[159]

Conversely, post-traumatic growth, positive psychological change experienced as a result of the struggle with highly challenging life circumstances could also result. Their triumph in a highly challenging environment could also increase their self-confidence and strengthen bonds with each other and with their families. "When people are deprived ... it can be really adverse, it can really mess up a person. With these guys, they were together," said Charles Nelson, a psychologist with the operational stress injury clinic at Parkwood Hospital in London, Ontario, Peter Suedfeld, a professor emeritus at the University of British Columbia, said the men are less likely to have trouble returning to their jobs. "Sailors who have been shipwrecked, for example ... many of them go back to sea," he said. "They'll feel that they can cope with anything that comes up." [158]

Activities

On Sunday, 17 October, six of the 33 rescued miners attended a multi-denominational memorial mass led by an evangelical pastor and a Roman Catholic priest at "Campamento Esperanza" (Camp Hope) where anxious relatives had awaited the men's return. Some of the rescuers who helped bring the miners to the surface were also attending.[141][159] Reporters and cameras mobbed the miners prompting the police to intervene to protect them. Omar Reygadas' family was swarmed by the media after they left the service and his 2-year-old great-granddaughter was pushed by the crowd and started crying. As Reygadas picked her up the cameras zoomed in. Reygadas stayed calm but offered his only answer in response to their questions: "I've had nightmares these days," Reygadas said from inside the little tent while reporters jockeyed for position, "but the worst nightmare is all of you."[160]

The 33 miners plan to start a foundation so they can use their experience to help in the field of mine safety. Yonni Barrios said "We're thinking about creating a foundation to solve [safety] problems in the mining industry. With this, with the experience that we had had, God help us, we should be able to solve these problems." Juan Illanes told El Mercurio "We have to decide how to direct our project so this type of thing never happens again. It needs to be done, but these things don't happen quickly".[161]

On 24 October, the miners attended a reception hosted by President Pinera at the Presidential palace in the capital, Santiago, and were awarded medals celebrating Chile's independence bicentennial. Outside, the men posed for photographs alongside the Phoenix rescue capsule that winched them to the surface that has been installed in the main square in Santiago. Afterward, at the National Stadium, the freed miners played their rescuers in a football match including President Piñera, Laurence Golborne, mining minister, and Jaime Manalich, the health minister. Team "Esperanza" (Hope), led by Franklin Lobos, all wore the same number, "33", against the government team but lost 2–3.[162]

Legacy of the accident

Color image of Los 33 miners attending a ceremony hosted by President Piñera at the Presidential Palace on 24 October 2010 after their rescue from the San Jose Mine
Los 33 miners attending a ceremony hosted by President Piñera at the Presidential Palace on 24 October 2010 after their rescue from the San Jose Mine

Political

Immediately following the San José mine collapse, President Piñera dismissed top officials of Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería de Chile (abbreviated Sernageomin), Chile's mining regulatory agency and vowed to undertake a major overhaul of the department in light of the accident.[3] Eighteen mines were shut down in the days following the accident and a further 300 may be ordered to close.As of December 2010[163] The San José mine's long-term fate is unclear; it is currently closed and will remain in limbo for an extended period as judicial processes are followed.As of December 2010

On 25 October, a preliminary report by the Commission on Work Safety, established by President Piñera in response to the accident, was delivered to the President ahead of schedule. The report is a direct result of the San Jose mining accident and contains 30 proposals ranging from improvements in hygiene to better coordination of local regulators. Although the commission had set Nov. 22 as the date to deliver its final report, it says it was able to discover a clear picture of job safety from sessions in both Santiago and regions throughout Chile. The commission held 204 hearings and reviewed 119 suggestions that came from online input.[164] Throughout the ordeal, President Piñera stressed the importance of rescuing the miners regardless of the cost. The rescue operation was expensive and estimates surpass US$20 million, excluding the expenses to build, maintain and secure "Campamento Esperanza" (Camp Hope). These costs exceed the total business debt of the owner of the mine, the San Esteban Mining Company, which is currently about US$19 million. The state mining company Codelco contributed about 75% of the cost while private companies responded to the emergency and donated services worth more than US$5 million to the rescue.[165]

Color image ofLos 33 miners posing with the President and First Lady of Chile in the Blue Room of the Presidential Palace on 24 October 2010
Los 33 miners posing with the President and First Lady of Chile in the Blue Room of the Presidential Palace on 24 October 2010

The French credit rating agency Coface declared that the reputational impact of the dramatic mining rescue will have a positive impact on the Andean nation's economy. "It provides to international investors an image of a country where you can do safe [sic] business," Coface's UK managing director, Xavier Denecker, says. "It gives a good impression in terms of technology, solidarity and efficiency." Coface rates countries according to the probability of private sector companies being successful. Chile holds its highest rating in South America: A2. The UK, in comparison, is inferior–an A3.[166]

Legal

A lawsuit, still pending, was filed against the company and a judge froze US$2 million of its assets; a lawyer for several of the miners' families described this as a refutation of the company's claims of not having even enough money to pay salaries.[163]

On 21 October, San Esteban Mining Company, sent out a public statement, signed by Chief of Operations Carlos Pinilla and mine manager Pedro Simunovic, that insisted that no company official "had the slightest indication that a catastrophe could occur." Miner Jorge Gallardo insisted that there was no way the owners could have been unaware of the situation since everything was recorded and his daily safety reports were signed by Pinilla. Rescued miner Victor Zamora commented "What made me sad was that people were dying because the company did not want to have something safer and only thought about money".[164]

Social

In El Pais, Hernán Rivera Letelier, a well known Chilean writer and former miner, offered advice to the miners: "I hope that the avalanche of lights and cameras and flashes that is rushing towards you is a light one. It's true that you've survived a long season in hell, but, when all's said and done, it was a hell you knew. "What's heading your way, now, comrades, is a hell that you have not experienced at all: the hell of the show, the alienating hell of TV sets. I've only got one thing to say to you, my friends: grab hold of your family. Don't let them go, don't let them out of your sight, don't waste them. Hold on to them as you hung on to the capsule that brought you out. It's the only way to survive this media deluge that's raining down on you."[167]

The Daily Telegraph reported that the miners have hired an accountant to ensure that they fairly share any income from their new celebrity status; including expected book and film deals. The men agreed to "speak as one" when they discuss their experience. While still trapped, they appointed one of their group to be their official biographer and another, their poet.[168]

The first of the expected books on the rescue, Under the Earth: The 33 Miners that Moved the World—is nearing completion. Another book called 33 Men, Buried Alive: The Inside Story of the Trapped Chilean Miners, by Jonathan Franklin, a writer for The Guardian, should be released in early 2011.[169][170]

The first of many expected TV documentaries was aired by NOVA on the US Public Broadcasting System on 26 October 2010 (the full video is linked below). [171][169]

Monument

Chilean President Sebastián Piñera has suggested turning Camp Hope into a memorial or museum to honor the men.[141]

The Fénix 2 capsule that was used in Operación San Lorenzo at the San José mine was placed on the Plaza de la Constitución, in front of Chile's presidential palace in Santiago. Currently, one of the backup capsules is in Copiapó and the other was sent to China for display in Chile's exhibit at the Shanghai Expo. Discussions are under way for a permanent display of the capsule and possibly some type of museum; potential locations include both Copiapó, the city nearby the accident site, and Talcahuano, 1,300 miles (2,100 km) south, where the capsules were built at a Chilean navy workshop.[172]As of December 2010

See also

  • Kathy Fiscus was a Californian child who fell down a well in 1949 and whose two day rescue attempt was broadcast live on radio and TV.
  • Alfredo Rampi fell down a well in 1981 in Italy, the rescue attempt was broadcast live for 18 hours.
  • Jessica McClure was a Texas toddler trapped in a well with the rescue televised live on CNN.
  • Quecreek Mine Rescue involved a similar rescue capsule in Pennsylvania, July 2002 to rescue a trapped mining crew.
  • The Epic of Riñihue a major effort by Chilean authorities to avoid a flooding after the 1960 Valdivia earthquake.
  • Beaconsfield Mine Collapse, 2006. Two Australian miners rescued after two weeks underground.

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  11. ^ First Chile miners leave hospital - Australian Broadcasting Corporation (15 October 2010) - Retrieved 18 October 2010
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