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Cave rescue is a highly specialized field of rescue in which injured or trapped people are removed from or treated in caves and other underground space(Holes). Cave rescue borrows from firefighting, confined space rescue, and rope rescue, but also has developed its own special techniques and skills for performing work in conditions that are almost always difficult and demanding.

In the United States the leading cave rescue training curriculum is developed and deployed by the National Cave Rescue Commission * (NCRC), which operates as part of the National Speleological Society (NSS).

Notable cave rescues or attempted rescues


  • Floyd Collins in Sand Cave in Kentucky in 1925. Despite heroic efforts, Collins died after a little more than two weeks less than 150 feet from the surface, his foot trapped by a rock.

  • Neil Moss in Peak Cavern, England in 1959. Trapped in a narrow tunnel, he was eventually suffocated by carbon dioxide after prolonged efforts to free him.

External links


rescue subterranea | Caving

Höhlenrettung

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Cave rescue".

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