Mine rescue is the very specialized job of
rescuing miners and others who have become trapped or injured
underground in
mine because of
mining accidents and
disasters such as
explosions caused by
firedamp, roof falls or floods.
Expert volunteers

U.S. mine rescuer, c.
Mining laws in developed countries require trained,
properly-equipped mine rescue personnel to be available at all
mining operations at both
surface
and
underground mining
operations. These personnel make up what is known as a "Mine rescue
team". Mine rescue teams must know the procedures used to rescue
miners trapped by various hazards, including
fires, explosions, cave-ins,
toxic
gas,
smoke
inhalation, and water entering the mine. As mine rescue is
particularly dangerous work, rescue crews are usually made up of
volunteers who risk their own lives to save their fellow workers.
Most mine rescue teams are composed of miners who know the
particular mine, and are familiar with the various sorts of mine
machinery they may encounter during the rescue, the layout of
workings and
geological conditions and
working practices. Local and state governments may also have teams
on call ready to respond to mine accidents.
Mine rescue teams are trained in
first aid
and the use of a wide variety of tools, and, in the case of
underground rescues, the operation of
SCBA
breathing sets (to work in passages
filled with mine gases such as
firedamp,
afterdamp,
chokedamp, and sometimes shallow
submersion).
Mine rescue men have been using breathing sets almost since they
were invented.
Generally only the rescuers use breathing
sets, but in one case where an advancing coalmine passage broke
into a surface hollow full of deep liquid peat,
flooding part of the mine (7-9 September 1950, Knockshinnoch
Castle Colliery
, near New
Cumnock
, Ayrshire
, Scotland
; 13 died,
[285399]), 115 trapped miners were equipped
with Siebe Gorman Salvuses (87
sets in all, mainly from fire stations)
so they could be led out through gas-filled workings.
British mine rescue men for a long time used the
Siebe Gorman Proto, which is often seen
in old group photographs. From about 1989 to 2002 onwards they used
the
SEFA. They now use a
Draeger rebreather. Narrow
spaces in mines are often too tight a squeeze for bulky
open circuit set cylinders.
In
Britain
, mine rescue teams are sometimes called to
investigate holes in the ground that have appeared because of land
surface subsidence into old mineshaft and mine workings.
See also
External links
- http://www.minemergency.com.au in Australia: they also help at
road traffic accident rescues and in accidents in surface
mines.
- http://www.minesrescue.com in Britain
- http://www.healeyhero.co.uk about Philip Healey
- http://www.heroes-of-mine.co.uk
-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/cumbria/features/2004/01/mine_rescue/index.shtml
a BBC article
- http://www.usmra.com/teamaccidents.htm hazards of mines
rescue
- http://www.usmra.com United States Mine Rescue Association
- http://www.labour.gov.sk.ca/safety/mine-rescue-manual
Saskatchewan Mine Emergency Response Program.
- Welsh
Coal Mines website and histories plus disasters and mines
rescue