男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
  Home>News Center>World
         
 

Rescuers find bodies of two W.Va.,miners
(AP)
Updated: 2006-01-22 08:52

Rescuers on Saturday found the bodies of two miners who disappeared after a conveyor belt caught fire deep inside a coal mine, bringing to 14 the number of West Virginia miners killed on the job in less than a month.

The bodies were found in an area of the mine where rescue teams had been battling the intense blaze for more than 40 hours. Rescuers could not enter that portion of the mine until the flames had been mostly extinguished and the tunnels cooled down.


Mourners exit the Bright Star Freewill Baptist Church in Melville, W.Va., Saturday, Jan. 21, 2006, near the Alma No. 1 mine where two miners have been missing since Thursday in Melville, W.Va.[AP photo]

"We have found the two miners we were looking for," said Doug Conaway, director of the state Office of Miners' Health Training and Safety. "Unfortunately, we don't have a positive outcome."

The miners became separated Thursday evening as their 12-member crew tried to escape a conveyor belt fire at Aracoma Coal's Alma No. 1 mine in Melville, about 60 miles southwest of Charleston. The rest of the crew and nine other miners working in a different section of the mine escaped unharmed.

Gov. Joe Manchin and Sen. Jay Rockefeller informed families of the deaths at a church before announcing them publicly, along with Don Blankenship, chairman of Aracoma's owner, Massey Energy.

"We have two brave miners that have perished," the governor told reporters.

Conaway said it appeared the two miners made a "valiant effort" to escape, but were blocked by high temperatures and thick smoke.

Saturday's deaths bring to 14 the number of West Virginia miners killed on the job since Jan. 2. Earlier this month, 12 miners died as a result of an explosion at the Sago Mine, more than 180 miles away on the northern side of the state. The sole survivor of that accident remained hospitalized in a light coma Saturday.

The governor pledged to introduce legislation Monday dealing with rapid responses in emergencies, electronic tracking technology and reserve oxygen stations for underground miners. He planned to travel to Washington on Tuesday to discuss the proposals with the state's congressional delegation.

"These two men who perished in this mine, the 12 men who perished in the Sago Mine, I can only say to each of those families ... that they have not died in vain," Manchin said.

Rep. Nick Rahall (news, bio, voting record), D-W.Va., said Congress must give the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration the tools to operate effectively, and may have to increase its budget.

"It's unfortunate that every coal mine health and safety law on the books is written with the blood of coal miners," Rahall said.

The federal Mine Health and Safety Act was written a year after a 1968 explosion in Farmington that killed 78 miners, including Manchin's uncle.

Rescue workers on the surface of the Aracoma mine got no response Saturday morning when they drilled a 200-foot hole into a mine shaft in an effort to contact the missing miners. Workers pounded on a steel drill bit but heard nothing from below, and a camera and a microphone lowered into the hole detected no sign of them.

Rescue efforts were hampered by intense heat and smoke that cut visibility to 2 to 3 feet in some parts of the mine. Teams were able to get into four tunnels, each about four miles long, but they could not get beyond the burning conveyor belt. Heat from the fire had also caused the roof of the mine to deteriorate.

The victims were identified as Don I. Bragg, 33, and Ellery Hatfield, 47. Both were husbands and fathers with more than a decade of mining experience and had worked in the Alma mine for five years.

"It's just rough. He's really going to be missed," said Kevin Walls, a nephew of Hatfield's. "He was just a good man. He would do anything to help anybody."

The two men had been equipped with oxygen canisters that typically produce about an hour's worth of air.

Jimmy Marcum, a 54-year-old retired miner from Delbarton, said better equipment is needed to protect miners.

"I mean, they can send a man to the moon but they can't make a (oxygen canister) that will last at least 16 hours. ... That's what they need to do," Marcum said.

Officials emphasized that there were key differences between the Alma mine fire and the Jan 2. Sago mine explosion. For one, the carbon monoxide levels, while still higher than normal in the Alma mine, were not as severe, Conaway said.

Also, the ventilation system continued to work at the Alma mine and no methane was detected coming out, said Robert Friend, acting deputy assistant secretary for MSHA.

That enabled rescuers to get into the mine more quickly. The gases at the Sago Mine and damage to the ventilation system had prevented investigators from entering the mine until Saturday. It will likely be another week before they can reach the deepest parts of the mine and begin the physical investigation into what caused the explosion, said Ben Hatfield, president of International Coal Group, which owns Sago.

Conveyor belt fires can occur when belt rollers get stuck or out of alignment and rub against the structure supporting them, said John Langton, MSHA's deputy administrator for coal mine safety and health. Another possible cause is the accumulation of coal dust.

An MSHA proposal in the early 1990s would have required more vigorous testing of fire resistancy of conveyor belts. But it was shelved in 2002.

The agency proposed the change after a study showed that conveyor belts sparked 53 coal mine fires between 1970 and 1988, with 36 of them occurring in the 1980s.

Langton said officials felt comfortable withdrawing the proposal because of improved sensors that can detect smoke and carbon monoxide. The monitoring system worked Thursday, he said.

The Aracoma mine received more than 90 citations from MSHA in 2005. According to the MSHA Web site, the most recent were issued Dec. 20, when the mine was hit with seven violations for problems related to its ventilation plan and efforts to control coal dust and other combustible materials.



Whale in River Thames
Greenpeace: Help end whaling
Kosova citizens mourn the death of their president
 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Tension remains after China's railway network turns normal

 

   
 

China to builds 3G telecom network by itself

 

   
 

Koizumi told Bush shrine visits to go on

 

   
 

Report: 6-party talk may resume in February

 

   
 

Chinese, Saudi groups plan oil company

 

   
 

Parliament moves delay Ukraine gas deal

 

   
  Parliament moves delay Ukraine gas deal
   
  Bush previews State of the Union themes
   
  U.S. muslims joins appeal to free reporter
   
  Pakistan: U.S. must not repeat airstrike
   
  Ethnic Albanians mourn the death of their president
   
  Experts: 'Decapitation' may not end terror
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 黄骅市| 柞水县| 重庆市| 荣成市| 蚌埠市| 奉化市| 洛隆县| 尚义县| 平江县| 桐乡市| 临沂市| 屯门区| 石首市| 临沂市| 香格里拉县| 泰顺县| 灵寿县| 景东| 东丽区| 兴海县| 平度市| 新疆| 永寿县| 彰武县| 宁南县| 福安市| 盘山县| 新乡市| 永川市| 明溪县| 桐乡市| 五指山市| 石楼县| 溆浦县| 岐山县| 凤台县| 陆河县| 南陵县| 剑阁县| 红安县| 浦东新区| 玛纳斯县| 新巴尔虎右旗| 兴文县| 乐至县| 屏边| 郸城县| 三亚市| 汤阴县| 大姚县| 黄冈市| 吴江市| 剑阁县| 阜宁县| 宜宾县| 鸡东县| 宾川县| 景宁| 繁昌县| 台东县| 广灵县| 兴业县| 清涧县| 贡觉县| 牡丹江市| 苏州市| 体育| 泗水县| 柏乡县| 石家庄市| 黄骅市| 敦化市| 杭锦旗| 年辖:市辖区| 怀远县| 名山县| 水富县| 玉溪市| 历史| 华蓥市| 广东省| 溧水县|