Originally published August 25, 2010 at 6:43 PM | Page modified August 26, 2010 at 8:07 AM
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Chilean miners to watch weight, play until rescue
Just 35 inches around the waist — that's how skinny Chile's 33 trapped miners have been told they need to be to ...
The Associated Press
Tight fit
Plans call for the trapped Chilean miners to be pulled through an escape tunnel about 26 inches wide — the diameter of a typical bike tire — and 2,200 feet long. The miners will have to be no more than 35 inches around the waist to make it out. The average U.S. waistline is 39.7 inches for men and 37 inches for women, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.The Associated Press
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COPIAPÓ, Chile — Put on a show. Play cards. Sing. Get exercise. And don't get too fat to squeeze through the escape tunnel.
Chilean officials are offering lots of advice to help 33 miners trapped underground keep their health and sanity as they wait to be rescued. One thing they're not sharing with the men is their estimate that it could take four months to drill them out of an emergency shelter nearly half a mile below the surface.
"I hope that nobody commits the imprudence of telling them something like this. We have asked the families to be careful in the letters they write," Interior Minister Rodrigo Hinzpeter said Wednesday.
The miners were trapped by an Aug. 5 collapse, and rescuers established contact with them Sunday by drilling a 6-inch-wide hole to the shelter. That hole and two others are now lifelines, delivering supplies, communications and fresh air to the miners while they wait for the escape tunnel to be drilled.
The miners have a general idea that their rescue will take time but haven't been given the details, Hinzpeter said.
Some mining experts think it will take far less than four months to dig the tunnel.
Larry Grayson, a professor of mining engineering at Pennsylvania State University, said it could take just 25 to 30 days to reach the miners. Gustavo Lagos, a professor at the Catholic University of Chile's Center for Mining, estimated the job could be done in two months if all goes well and four months if it all bogs down.
Lilianett Gomez, whose father, Mario, is trapped in the mine, said she thinks the miners know their rescue won't be quick. "They know how long it will take for them to be rescued. As miners they know the work very well," she said.
The rescue team isn't ready to let families talk directly with the miners, but Chilean President Sebastián Piñera asked their leader, Luis Urzua, in a call Tuesday what they needed.
"That you rescue us as quickly as possible, and that you don't abandon us," the shift foreman responded.
Urzua, 54, also described the collapse.
"It was frightening. We felt like the mountain was coming down on us, without knowing what happened. Thanks to God, we still hadn't gathered together to go out to have lunch. ... At 20 minutes before 2 (their usual lunch hour), the mountain came down on top of us.
"For about four or five hours, we couldn't see a thing. After that we saw that we were trapped by an enormous rock that filled the entire passage of the tunnel."
The miners made a two-day emergency food supply last more than two weeks as they waited for contact from the outside world and conserved power from their headlamps before rescuers sent them LED lights.
They remain days away from being able to eat solid food because they went hungry for so long. Rescuers have sent down a high-energy glucose gel, and on Wednesday they gave the miners cans of a milklike drink enriched with calories and protein.
Even though the miners have undoubtedly lost a significant amount of weight, Chilean officials are trying to ensure they don't bulk up before their rescue. They say the miners will have to be no more than 35 inches around the waist to make it out of the tunnel.
The escape tunnel will be about 26 inches wide — the diameter of a typical bike tire — and stretch for more than 2,200 feet through solid rock. That's more than 80 inches in circumference, but rescuers also have to account for the space of the basket that will be used to pull the miners to safety.
Most Americans couldn't meet the 35-inch limit. The average U.S. waistline is 39.7 inches for men and 37 inches for women, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Chile's health minister, Dr. Jaime Manalich, said officials are planning exercise and other activities to keep the miners healthy and trim, using some of the passages that remain accessible to the miners.
"We hope to define a secure area where they can establish various places — one for resting and sleeping, one for diversion, one for food, another for work," Manalich said.
Establishing a daily and nightly routine is important, the minister said, adding that having fun also will be critical. The rescue team is creating an entertainment program "that includes singing, games of movement, playing cards. We want them to record songs, to make videos, to create works of theater for the family."
The Chilean government has asked NASA for advice on "life sciences" issues and technology that can help the miners, and the space agency will do what it can, said NASA spokesman Mike Curie.
The gold and copper mine runs like a corkscrew for more than 4 miles under a barren mountain in northern Chile's Atacama Desert.
Outside, Chilean flags are everywhere, including the torn one that became a symbol of Chile's resistance when a young man was photographed holding it just after a massive earthquake rocked the South American nation last year. That flag was raised above 33 others that sit on a hill over the mine, each representing one of the trapped men.
Some relatives filed suit Wednesday against the mine's owner, Compañía Minera San Esteban. Attorney Remberto Valdes, representing the miner Raul Bustos, accused the company of fraud and serious injury based on the lack of safety measures, such as the escape tunnel that the state-owned Codelco copper company is preparing to dig. Four municipal governments in the area are preparing a similar claim.
Associated Press writers Federico Quilodran in Copiapó, Seth Borenstein in Washington, D.C., and Michael Warren in Buenos Aires, Argentina, contributed to this report.
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