11 of 12 miners reported alive are dead (AP) Updated: 2006-01-04 18:20
At that point, chaos broke out in the church and a fight started.
"Everyone in the church is just devastated," Red Cross volunteer Tamila
Swiger told CNN, saying people were breaking down and suffering panic attacks.
The false news about survivors spread quickly after people overheard cell
phone calls, Hatfield said. In reality, rescuers had only confirmed finding 12
miners and were checking their vital signs. But what began to leak out to
anxious family members was that 12 miners had been discovered alive.
"That information spread like wildfire, because it had come from the command
center," he said.
Family members streamed from the church where they had kept vigil, shouting
"Praise the Lord!" Bells at the church rang out as family members ran out of the
church, yelling "They're alive!"
The explosion was the state's deadliest mining accident since November 1968,
when 78 men — including the uncle of Gov. Joe Manchin — died in an explosion at
Consol's Farmington No. 9 mine in Marion County, an hour's drive north of here.
Nineteen bodies remain entombed in the mountain. It was that disaster that
prompted Congress to pass the Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969.
The 12 miners were found together behind a barrier they had constructed to
block carbon monoxide gas. They were found near where the company had drilled an
air hole early Tuesday in an attempt to contact the men.
The hole also was used to check air quality in the mine, which revealed high
concentrations of carbon monoxide. The odorless, colorless gas can be lethal at
high doses. At lower levels, it can cause headaches, dizziness, disorientation,
nausea, fatigue and brain damage.
I think we can confirm with certainty the miners survived for a certain
amount of time, but we have no way of knowing exactly how long," Hatfield
said.
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