BSS
  11 Oct 2024, 14:06

One dead, 23 rescued from Colorado gold mine tourist site

LOS ANGELES, United States, Oct 11, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - One person died and 23
others were rescued after an elevator malfunctioned during a tour of a
disused Colorado gold mine on Thursday, which had left a dozen people stuck
underground for several hours.

The incident occurred during the Mollie Kathleen Gold Mine Tour, which takes
visitors 1,000 feet (300 meters) underground in the western US state.

A group of 11 people, including two children, were in the elevator when the
failure occurred, Teller County Sheriff's Office said in a statement
Thursday. One person died as a result of the malfunction, and four received
minor injuries.

First responders at the scene "determined that a malfunction occurred with
the elevator that brings visitors into and out of the mine," the statement
said, without explaining the cause of the problem.

"We did have one fatality that occurred during this issue at 500 feet,"
county sheriff Jason Mikesell told a news conference earlier.

The 11 people were brought to the surface by the same elevator that had
malfunctioned, according to the sheriff's office.

An additional 12 people, who had been stranded in a tunnel at the bottom of
the mine, were "safely rescued", Governor Jared Polis said in a post on X
late Thursday.

The tour group and a mine employee had been stuck underground for about six
hours, Mikesell told reporters after the rescue.

After engineers and local authorities confirmed it was safely functioning,
the 12 stuck in the tunnel were brought up in the elevator four at a time, he
added.

Emergency officials with ropes had been standing by in case they were
required.

Chairs, blankets and water have been provided to those in the mine.

"The atmospherics are good inside the tunnel," Mikesell said earlier.

Those still inside the mine had not been informed of the fatality.

"We're just trying to keep down the worry of what's going on, so that nobody
gets excited," Mikesell said.

The mine outside the small city of Cripple Creek, around 100 miles south of
Denver, offers a chance to "Experience the 'Old West' as it was for hard rock
gold miners of 'The World's Greatest Gold Camp,'" according to its website.

The Mollie Kathleen Gold Mine Tour would be "closed until further notice," a
message on the website said Thursday, calling the recent incident "tragic".