Amining accidentis an accident that occurs during the process ofminingmineralsor metals. Thousands of miners die from mining accidents each year, especially fromundergroundcoal mining,although accidents also occur inhard rock mining.Coal mining is considered much more hazardous than hard rock mining due to flat-lying rock strata, generally incompetent rock, the presence ofmethanegas, andcoal dust.Most of the deaths these days occur indeveloping countries,and rural parts ofdeveloped countrieswhere safety measures are not practiced as fully. Amining disasteris an incident where there are five or more fatalities.[1]
On April 26, 1942, in theBenxihu (Honkeiko)coal minein Liaoning Province, China, what is believed to be the worst mining disaster in history occurred when acoal dust explosionkilled over 1,500 people.[4]
The disaster occurred in an area that is now within the borders of modern-day China but was at the time part of thepuppet stateofManchukuoestablished by Japan after it invaded and occupied northeast China in the 1930s. The Japanese administrators of the mine forced Chinese labourers to conduct the mining work under harsh conditions. The disaster began with a fire in the mine. In order to suppress it, the Japanese operators cut off the air in the ventilation shafts and blocked off the mine so as to deprive the blaze of oxygen. Most workers were not evacuated before these actions, and they were trapped within the sealed-off area of the mine; they suffocated to death as the fire burned off oxygen and led tocarbon monoxide poisoning.Once the fire died out and the mine was re-opened, ten days were required for workers to remove debris and reach the bodies of those who had been trapped inside the mine.[5]
The dead consisted of 1,518 Chinese and 31 Japanese. Most of the bodies were later buried in a mass grave. After the war and liberation of China by the Soviet Union, the disaster was investigated. The Soviet report concluded that the majority of the deaths were not caused directly by the initial fire but were the result of carbon monoxide poisoning and suffocation resulting from the decisions of the Japanese.[6][better source needed]
December 6, 1907:Monongah Mining disasterinMonongah, West Virginia.Official death toll is 362, but due to inadequate record keeping, the true death toll could be around 500.[68]Victims were mostlyItalian immigrantworkers, including children. The disaster is widely considered the worst coal mining accident in American history.[69]
November 13, 1909:Cherry Mine disasterinCherry, Illinois.259 workers, some as young as eleven, died in this mine fire, which had the most fatalities of any mine fire in the United States.
December 21, 1910:The Pretoria Pit disasterin Westhoughton, Lancashire, 344 men and boys lost their lives in this explosion, which is the worst mining disaster on one day in England.
April 28, 1914:The Eccles mine disaster was an explosion of coal-seam, in Eccles, West Virginia. The explosion took the lives of at least 180 men and boys
June 8, 1917:Speculator Mine disasterinButte, Montana.An electric cable being lowered into the mine was accidentally ignited at 2,500 feet below the surface. The fire quickly climbed the cable and ignited the mine's wooden shaft. The shaft became a chimney, eliminating the mine's primary source of oxygen. Nearly all of the 168 fatalities were due to asphyxia, from carbon monoxide poisoning. This is the deadliest underground hard rock mining disaster in United States history.
January 12, 1918Minnie Pit disasterinStaffordshire,England was a coal mining accident in which 155 men and boys died (144 from carbon monoxide poisoning and 11 from violence, plus carbon monoxide poisoning). The disaster, which was caused by an explosion due to firedamp, is the worst ever recorded in the North Staffordshire Coalfield. An official investigation never established what caused the ignition of flammable gases in the pit.
February 8, 1923TheDawson Stag Canon #1 Mine Explosionkilled 123; many were descendants of men killed in the 1913 explosion at the same mine. As a mine car derailed, it caused sparks and ignited coal dust, causing the explosion.
February 20, 1925The City Mine Disaster, Sullivan County, Indiana, United States. An explosion occurred at this coal mine, killing 51.[75][76]
November 3, 1926TheBarnes-Hecker Mine Disaster,near Ishpeming, Michigan, United States. A stope collapse allowed water and quicksand to fill most of the mine within 15 minutes, and 51 miners drowned.
January 3, 1934:Nelson III Coal Mine, Osek u Duchcova,Czechoslovakia,Accumulated coal dust explosion. 142 dead miners including one woman. In June 1934, the accumulated gases knocked out the masonry cover above the pit and killed two more workers - the number of victims thus rose to 144.
July 2, 1937The Holditch (also known as Brymbo) Colliery disaster was a coal mining accident in Chesterton, Staffordshire, England, in which 30 men died and eight were injured. It was caused due to a fire and subsequent explosions. Fatalities were exacerbated because management chose to try to save the coal seam, and risked the lives of mine workers while delaying evacuation.
November 11, 1937:According toJapanese governmentofficial confirmed report, a long period heavy rain contiue, a huge landslide hit in Ogushi sulfur mine, followed to landslide and a smelter fire atTsumagoi,Gunma Prefecture,Japan, as resulting to 245 person were human fatalities and 32 persons were wounded.
May 10, 1938:Explosion in Markham No. 1 Colliery nearStaveley, Derbyshire,England. 79 workers died and 40 were seriously injured.[77]
April 26, 1942:Benxihu Collierydisaster inBenxi,Liaoning,China. 1,549 workers died, in the worst coal mine accident ever in the world. At the time, during World War II, this area was occupied by Japan and the mine was under control of Japanese managers. The overwhelming number of dead were Chinese forced labourers.
March 25, 1947:Coal dust explosion inCentralia, Illinois,mine killed 111 miners.
July 14th, 1949:firedamp explosion at the María Luisa pit (Langreo,Asturias,Spain), killing 17 miners and 4mules.
September 7, 1950:Knockshinnoch Mine Disaster: Ayrshire Scotland: Liquid peat and moss flooded the mine, trapping over 100 men underground. It took days to reach the trapped men of whom 13 died.
December 10, 1954:Newton Chikli Colliery disaster,Chhindwara (M.P.), India. Flooding of the mine was caused by inrush of water from old workings of the same mine. There were 112 persons inside the mine when it was flooded. 49 persons managed to escape through the incline; the remaining 63 persons were trapped and drowned.
August 8, 1956:Bois du Cazierdisaster inMarcinelle,Belgium. A fire in the mines resulted in 262 deaths; of the 274 people working inBois du Cazieron that morning, only twelve survived. 138 of the victims were Italian migrant workers.
March 28, 1965:Several tailing dams at a copper mine failed during anearthquake,releasing water and slag which wiped out the town of El Cobre inValparaíso Region,Chile;350–400 miners and residents died.
October 21, 1966:Aberfan Disasterwas a catastrophic collapse of a colliery spoil-tip that caused an avalanche in theWelshvillage of Aberfan, engulfing Pantglas Junior School, killing 116 children and 28 adults.
July 30, 1973:Markham Colliery disasternearStaveley, Derbyshire,England. 18 workers were killed and 11 seriously injured when a descending cage failed to slow at the bottom of the mine shaft.
December 27, 1974:An explosion and a fire in a coal mine nearLiévin,France kills 41 and injures a further six in the worst mining disaster in France since World War II.[80]
December 27, 1975:Chasnala mining disaster,Dhanbad,Jharkhand,India, 372 miners died and another 130 contract workers are claimed to have died when water from adjacent mine gusted after the wall in between collapsed.
October 16, 1981:A methane explosion in a coal mine owned by Kokutan Yubari Mining Company nearYūbari, Hokkaidoresulted in 93 deaths including 10 rescuers.[81]
January 18, 1984:Miike coal mineA fire in a mine owned by Mitsui Mining Company nearŌmuta, Fukuokaresulted in 83 deaths and an additional 13 injuries.[83]
July 19, 1985:Val di Stava dam collapsetook place in the village of Stava, nearTesero,Italy, when two tailings dams failed that had been used for sedimenting the mud from the nearby Prestavel mine. It resulted in one of Italy's worst disasters, killing 268 people, destroying 63 buildings, and demolishing eight bridges.
May 13, 1993:Middelbult colliery near the town ofSecundain South Africa. 53 people killed in an underground methane explosion.[85]
August 28, 1994:Rajpura Dariba Mine VRM disaster,Dariba, Udaipur, India: This incident occurred due to flooding of the slurry from a mined VRMUnderground mining hard rockstop, where cemented fill could not settle and its plug failed. This slurry accumulated in the plugged shaft, which could not take the load and subsequently failed. All of the material fell in the shaft, resulting in the drowning deaths of 63 people working below.[86][87]
May 10, 1995:Vaal Reefs mining disaster,South Africa; a locomotive fell down a lift shaft and landed on a cage, causing the deaths of 104 people.
March 24, 1996:Marcopper mining disaster,occurred in the island province ofMarinduque,Philippines.A year after the Republic Act No. 7942, or also known as "The Philippine Mining Act of 1995" is enacted. A mine tailings pit fracture caused toxic waste to flood the Makulapnit-Boac river, displacing 400 families in Barangay Hinapulan. Drinking water contamination killed fish and shrimp, while large animals perished. Crops, irrigation channels, and the Boac River were destroyed.
August 31st, 1995:firedamp explosion at the San Nicolás Pit (Ablaña, Asturias, Spain), killing 14 miners.
January 30, 2000:Baia Mare cyanide spilltook place inBaia Mare,Romania.The accident, called the worst environmental disaster in Europe sinceChernobyl,was a release of 100,000 tons of cyanide-contaminated water by an Aurul mining company when a reservoir broke, releasing its waters into the riversSomeş,TiszaandDanube.Although no human fatalities were reported, the leak killed up to 80% of aquatic life of some of the affected rivers.
October 11, 2000:2000 Martin County coal slurry spilloccurred after midnight when the bottom of a coal slurry impoundment owned byMassey EnergyinMartin County, Kentucky,broke into an abandoned underground mine below. The slurry came out of the mine openings, sending an estimated 306 million US gallons (1.16 million cubic metres; 1.16 billion litres) of slurry down two tributaries of the Tug Fork River. By morning, Wolf Creek was oozing with the black waste; on Coldwater Fork, a 10-foot-wide (3.0 m) stream became a 100-yard (91 m) expanse of thick slurry.[88]
September 23, 2001:Brookwood Mine DisasterAt approximately 5:15 p.m., at the Jim Walter Resources No. 5 coal mine in Brookwood, Alabama a cave-in caused a release of methane gas that sparked two major explosions, killing 13 miners.[89]
January 23, 2002:La Espuela Coal Mine disasterThe disaster was caused by flooding of the shaft. Without the ability to flee, the 13 miners drowned.[90]
A memorial to the men killed in the Crandall Canyon Mine collapse.August 6, 2007:Crandall Canyon Minecollapse. 6 miners and 3 rescue workers killed after subsequent collapses caused by inadequate mine design.[91]
May–June 2009:2009 Harmony Gold mine deaths- at least 82 miners died from inhalation of poisonous gasses created by a fire in a closed section of the mine where unofficial miners were operating illegally.[92][93]
May 8, 2010:Raspadskaya mine explosioninKemerovo Oblast,Russia.An explosion believed to have been caused by a methane build up. 66 people were confirmed to have died with at least 99 others injured and as many as 24 unaccounted for.
August 5, 2010:2010 Copiapó mining accident,Atacama Desert, Chile. The 121-year-oldSan Josécopper–gold mine structurally collapsed at 14:05CLT.The heart of the mountain, which had the mass of twoEmpire State Buildings,collapsed and caused catastrophic damage to the mine. It blocked all possible escape routes forthe 33miners trapped at 2,300 feet (700 m). After 69 days, all 33 miners were rescued.
November 19, 2010:Pike River Mine disasterin New Zealand. At 3:45 pm, the coal mine exploded. 29 men underground died immediately, or shortly afterwards, from the blast or from the toxic atmosphere. Two men in the stone drift, some distance from the mine workings, managed to escape. (Extract from Royal Commission of Enquiry Report on Pike River.)
October 28th, 2013:a leak of firedamp gas killed six miners working at a depth of almost 700 metres in the Emilio del Valle mine inLeón,Castille and León,Spain.
May 13, 2014:Soma mine disastertook place inSoma,Turkey. The accident was reportedly the worst mining accident ever in Turkey, and is the worst mining accident in the 21st century so far. 301 people died.
Breaking the News,painted by Australian artistJohn Longstaffin 1887, depicts a miner informing a widow of her husband's death in a mining accident.Mount Mulligan disaster 1921 – the steel cable drums were blown 50 feet from their foundations.
22 miners drowned in December 1882 in the Australasian number 2 deep lead gold mine at Creswick in Victoria.[103]The mine was violently flooded by a burst of water when miners digging a new drive approached too close to the abandoned and flooded Australasian number 1 workings, due to an error in surveying by the manager of the mine.[104]5 miners survived and were rescued after 50 hours trapped underground. This disaster, with the highest death toll from a gold mine disaster in Australian history, left 63 children without fathers and 18 widows.[105]
TheBulli Mine Disasterof 23 March 1887 involved agas explosionin the mine that killed 81 men and boys, leaving 50 women widows and 150 children without fathers.
TheMount Kembla Mine Disasterof 31 July 1902 was an explosion resulting in the death of 96 miners, including two engaged in rescue work. It remains the worst mining disaster in Australian history.
A coal dust explosion at theMount Mulligan mineon 19 September 1921 killed 75 or 76 workers.
Tasmania'sBeaconsfield Mine collapseoccurred on 25 April 2006. Of the 17 people who were in the mine at the time, 14 escaped immediately following the collapse, one was killed and the remaining two were found alive after five days. The survivors were trapped in a 1.5m x 1.2m cherry picker cage, which had saved them from being crushed by rocks.[106]As it was not safe for rescuers to blast their way through, a special borer was brought in to drill an escape shaft. They were finally released on 9 May after 14 days underground.
Three mining disasters occurred at Moura in a 20-year period. The first of these was in 1975, at the Kianga Mine, where 13 men died in an underground explosion. The mine was sealed without their bodies being retrieved. In 1986 a second disaster occurred, as an underground explosion, which took the lives of 12 miners.[107]The bodies of all those persons were retrieved. In Moura on 7 August 1994 a third major mining accident occurred with an explosion at Moura No. 2 Mine. A second explosion at the mine approximately a day and a half later saw rescue attempts abandoned, and the mine was sealed, with the bodies of the 11 miners unretrieved.[108]
In the 1996 Gretley coal mine disaster, near Newcastle, four men were killed when their mining machine broke into the flooded workings of an old coalmine, abandoned over 80 years earlier.[109][110]
Four miners were killed in a windblast incident at theNorthparkesmine outside the New South Wales town of Parkes in 1999.[111]
A mine collapsed atBallaratGold Mine in Victoria on March 14, 2024, resulting in a man dead, and another in critical condition. The two had been 'air legging' in a prohibited area under unsupported ground when the collapse occurred at 4:50pm. 29 other miners took refuge in a safety pod and were later brought to safety. The air legging technique is to be no longer used temporarily while a work safe investigation is underway.Australian Workers' Unionorganiser Ross Kenna said the geology of the mine is not suitable for the technique.[112][113]
On March 4, 1887, 120 miners died in a coal mine in La Boule,Borinagedue to amethaneexplosion.[37]
On the morning of August 8, 1956, a fire in the mineBois du CazierinMarcinellecaused 262 victims, with only 12 survivors.[114]A mining cart on an elevator cage hit an oil pipe and electricity lines, with the resulting fire trapping the miners. Most of the victims were immigrants (136 Italians, 8 Poles, 6 Greeks, 5 Germans, 5 Frenchmen, 3 Hungarians, 1 Englishman, 1 Dutchman, 1 Russian and 1 Ukrainian.[115])
On September 4, 2014, after a 3.5 Richter earthquake hit Zenica causedrock burstin coal mine "Raspotočje", 34 miners remained trapped inside the mine. It was later reported that 5 miners were killed in theaccident.[116]
The1887 Nanaimo mine explosioninNanaimo,British Columbiakilled 150 miners at the No 1 Esplanade Mine. Explosives were laid improperly triggering a massive mine-wide explosion. Most miners were killed instantly, only 7 survived. Of the 150 workers killed, 53 of them were Chinese, the names of which are mostly unknown.
TheHillcrest mine disaster,the worst coal mining disaster of Canadian history, occurred inAlbertain 1914. Deaths from the methane and coal dust-fueled explosion numbered 189; news coverage was eclipsed by the First World War. The mine remained in use until 1939.
On May 20, 1980, a mining disaster in Val-d'Or, Quebec killed eight men under 68,000 tons of debris when part of a 150-meter shaft collapsed; 16 men escaped by scrambling through a partially completed ventilation shaft. Charges of manslaughter were made against the company which pled non guilty. It was not the fault of the owners of the operation, a jury has found in acquitting Belmoral Mines Ltd. on all charges. A song about this event calledLa tragédie de la Balmoralwas recorded and published by singer Jean-Guy Gauthier in 1981.[117][118]
On 18 September 1992, at the height of alabour disputeat theGiant MinenearYellowknife,an explosion resulting from a bomb planted by striking worker "Roger Warren", killed nine men riding through a transport tunnel.
Coal mining accidents in the province ofNova Scotiaspanning 65 years referred to collectively as theSpringhill mining disasters,which claimed in total at least 138 lives of men and boys due to coal dust explosions. TheWestray Mine disasterin 1992 claimed the lives of 26 miners in a methane/coal dust explosion at a recently opened mining operation. Both of these mines were subsequently permanently closed in the wake of these events.
On 17 May 2006, four people died due toasphyxiationin an accident at the decommissionedSullivan Mine.
In January 2006,an explosion occurred in a mine in Copiapó,leaving 70 miners trapped underground. The miners were rescued after a brief period of time, but two people died.
According to one source, in 2003 China accounted for the largest number of coal-mining fatalities, accounting for about 80% of the world's total, although it produced only 35% of the world's coal.[121]Between January 2001 and October 2004, there were 188 accidents that had a death toll of more than 10, about one such accident every 7.4 days.[121]After the2005 Sunjiawan mine disaster,which killed at least 210 miners, a meeting of the State Council was convened to work on measures to improve work safety in coal mines. The meeting's statement indicated serious problems such as violation of safety standards and overproduction in some coal mines. Three billion yuan (360 million US dollars) were dedicated for technological renovation on work safety, gas management in particular, at state-owned major coal mines. The government also promised to send safety supervision teams to 45 coal mines with serious gas problems and invite colliery safety experts to evaluate safety situations in coal mines and formulate prevention measures.[122]
In 2006, according to the State Work Safety Supervision Administration, 4,749 Chinese coal miners were killed in thousands of blasts, floods, and other accidents. For example, a gas explosion at theNanshan Collierykilled 24 people on November 13, 2006; the mine was operating without any safety license and theXinhua News Agencyclaimed the cause was incorrect usage of explosives. However, the 2006 rate was 20.1% less than 2005 despite an 8.1% increase in production.[123]
TheNew York Timesreported that China's lack of a free press, independent trade unions, citizen watchdog groups and other checks of official power has made cover-ups of mining accidents more possible, even in the Internet age. As a result, Chinese bureaucrats habitually hide scandals (such as mine disasters, chemical spills, the 2003 SARS epidemic, and tainted milk powder) for fear of being held accountable by the rulingChinese Communist Partyor exposing their own illicit deals with companies involved. Under China's authoritarian system, superiors reward subordinates for strict compliance with goals established by authorities, like reducing mine disasters. Indeed, should a mining accident occur, the incentive to hide it is often stronger than the reward for managing it well, as any disaster is almost surely considered a liability.[124]
On August 30, 2012, anexplosionkilled 45 people at the Xiaojiawan coal mine in Sichuan province.[125][126]A few days later on September 3, 2012, 14 miners were killed at Gaokeng Coal Mine in Jiangxi province.[127]
On March 29, 2013, alandslidetrapped 83 people in the Gyama Mine in Tibet.[128]
On 4 January 2014 TheChinese Governmentstated that 1,049 people died in the year 2013, down 24 percent from 2012.[129]
TheCourrières mine disasterwas the worst ever pit mine disaster in Europe. It caused the death of 1,099 miners (including many children) in Northern France on 10 March 1906. It seems that this disaster was surpassed only by theBenxihu Collieryaccident in China on April 26, 1942, which killed 1,549 miners. A dust explosion, the cause of which is not known with certainty, devastated a coal mine operated by the Compagnie des mines de houille de Courrières (founded in 1852) between the villages of Méricourt (404 killed), Sallaumines (304 killed), Billy-Montigny (114 killed), and Noyelles-sous-Lens (102 killed) about two kilometres (one mile) to the east of Lens, in the Pas-de-Calais département (about 220 km, or 140 miles, north of Paris).
A large explosion was heard shortly after 06:30 on the morning of Saturday 10 March 1906. An elevator cage at Shaft 3 was thrown to the surface, damaging pit-head workings; windows and roofs were blown out on the surface at Shaft 4; an elevator cage raised at Shaft 2 contained only dead and unconscious miners.
The twelve mines in the Netherlands, four of which werestate owned,were considered among the safest in the world, with only three larger accidents occurring during 70 years of mining:
The most notable mining accident in New Zealand is the 1896Brunner Mine disaster,which killed all 65 miners inside. On 19 November 2010, there were four explosions over nine days atPike River mine;29 miners were killed and two escaped with minor injuries.
On November 25, 2006, the worstmining disasteroccurred in modern Polish history, 23 miners lost their lives atHalemba Coal Mine,a colliery in the town ofRuda Śląskain the southern industrial province ofSilesia.A methane explosion at a depth of 1,030 meters caused the November 21 tragedy. The miners were attempting to retrieve €17 million ($US22 million) worth of equipment from a tunnel when a blast caused the shaft to collapse. The tunnel was supposed to have been closed in March due to dangerously high methane concentrations, but was kept active because of the value of the equipment left behind.[137]
Several major mining accidents have happened in Russia, particularly theUlyanovskaya Mine disasterof 2007, which killed at least 106 miners. On January 20, 2013, at least four miners died and four more went missing following an accident at a coal mine in the Kuznetsk Basin, in western Siberia.[138]In November 2021, theListvyazhnaya mine disastertook place in Listvyazhnaya; many people were trapped.
The history of mining in Spain has left a number of major mining accidents with hundreds of victims. The majority of the accidents and casualties have happened in the North of Spain and are particularly related to coal mining, mainly due to the collapse of structures and gas explosions. Though, the worst recorded accident took place in Villanueva del Río,Sevilla,in the Southwest of the country on 28 April 1904, killing 63 people and leaving several more injured.[139]
437 deaths[141]on 21 January 1960 theCoalbrook mining disasteroccurred at Coalbrook North colliery. Coalbrook North colliery was one of the underground collieries of Clydesdale (Transvaal) Collieries Limited and was situated nearSasolburgin theOrange Free Stateprovince[142][143]
53 deaths on 13 May 1993 at Middelbult colliery. Middelbult colliery was and is still one of the underground collieries ofSasol Miningsituated near the town ofSecunda, Mpumalanga
The three worst mining accidents inTaiwanall happened in 1984:
On June 20, 1984, inHaishan Coal Mine[zh]inTucheng District,a runaway mining cart struck a high voltage transformer and triggered an explosion. 72 miners died from carbon monoxide poisoning.
On July 10, 1984, 103 miners died inMeishan Coal Mine[zh]inRuifang Districtas a result of carbon monoxide poisoning caused by a fire started in the air compressor chamber.
On December 5, 1984, an explosion occurred at Haishan Coal Mine No. 1 inSanxia District.93 miners died from carbon monoxide poisoning with only one survival who was rescued 93 hours after the initial explosion.
At least 56 miners were killed in April 1998 after heavy rains floodedtanzanitemine shafts.[144]Five people were killed in July 2013 after thetanzanitequarry they were working in the Mererani mining hills collapsed above their heads. A sixth was admitted to hospital in critical condition.[145]
In March 1992 at the TCC Kozla mine, 263 miners were killed due to a firedamp explosion[147]
In 2008 there was another disaster which resulted in one person losing their life. In November 2013, 300 workers barricaded the Zonguldak mine in order to protest the working conditions.
During the year of 2009, in December killed 19 miners due to a methane gas explosion inBursa Province.
In 2010, there was a mining disaster inZonguldak Provincewhich resulted in the deaths of 30 workers in a coal mine. The explosion was caused by afiredampexplosion. Previous mining disasters have also occurred here, one in 1992 resulted in the deaths of 270 workers. This was the worst mining disaster until the Soma mine disaster.
In recent years, the Turkish coal mining industry has had the highest number of fatal accidents per million tons of coal produced. When using the "deaths per million tons of coal production" measure, on any given day, a Turkish coal miner is 360 times more likely to be killed in a Turkish mine than an American coal miner is in an American mine, and 5 times more likely to die from the laxmine safetystandards of the Turkish mines than even a Chinese coal miner, whose country places with a distant second in terms of safety related deaths per million tons of coal produced.[153]
In England,The Oaks explosionremains the worst mining accident, claiming 388 lives on 12–13 December 1866 nearBarnsleyinYorkshirealthough in the first and main explosion only 340 died, fewer than at the Hulton colliery, but subsequent explosions claimed other lives during the night and the following day.
The Hulton Collieryexplosion atWesthoughton,Lancashire,in 1910 claimed the lives of 344 miners.[154]
An explosion in 1878, at the Wood Pit,Haydock,Lancashire,killed over 200 workers, although only 189 were included in the 'official list'.[155]Another disaster that killed many miners was theHartley Colliery Disaster,which occurred in January 1862 when the beam of the pumping engine broke suddenly and fell into the single shaft serving the pit. The beam blocked the shaft and entombed hundreds of miners. The final death toll was 204, most of whom were suffocated by the lack ofoxygen.
In themetalliferousmines of Cornwall, some of the worst accidents were atEast Wheal Rosein 1846, where 39 workers were killed by a sudden flood; atLevant minein 1919, where 31 were killed and many injured in a failure of theman engine;12 killed atWheal Agarin 1883 when a cage fell down a shaft and seven killed atDolcoath minein 1893 when a largestullcollapsed.[156][157][158]
Another serious incident occurred in the smallAyrshiremining village ofKnockshinnochin September 1950. For several tense days rescuers battled bravely against all odds to reach the 129 men trapped deep underground when a field above where they were working caved-in, flooding the mine workings with thick liquid peat, cutting off all means of escape. 116 were rescued but 13 died.[160]A film,The Brave Don't Cry,was made about the disaster in 1952.[161]
The worst Scottish mining disaster in the 20th century took place at Auchengeich byMoodiesburnin September 1959, with 47 men killed.[162]The total surpassed the 40 who haddied in floodingatRedding, Falkirkin September 1923.[163]
Crowd gathering at thepit headof the Senghenydd Colliery after the explosion in October 1913
During the period 1850 to 1930 theSouth Wales coalfieldhad the worst disaster record.[clarification needed]This was due to the increasing number of mines being sunk to greater depths into gas-containing strata, combined with poor safety and management practices. As a result, there were nearly forty underground explosions in theGlamorganandMonmouthshireareas of the coalfield during this time. Each accident resulted in the deaths of twenty or more workers – either directly in the explosion or by suffocation by the poisonous gases formed. The total death toll from these disasters was 3,119 people.[citation needed]The four worst accidents in Wales were:
TheScofield Mine disasteroccurred on May 1, 1900, nearScofield, Utah.At least 200 men died making it the worst mining disaster in the United States at that point.[166]
TheFraterville mine disasteroccurred on May 19, 1902, killing 216 miners making it one of the worst in American history. Fraterville is located in western Anderson County, Tennessee. Also in the same year on July 10, 1902, theRolling Mill Mine Disasterhappened in Johnstown, Pa. It killed 112, many of whom had just arrived in town. At the time it was one of the region's most productive mines.
The Marianna Mine Disaster occurred on November 28, 1908, in a coal mine nearMarianna, Pennsylvaniaresulting in the death of 154 men from the explosion. The explosion occurred during shift change, as men entered the mine before the previous shift had left. Consequently, the mine contained many more miners than usual. Another accident occurred in the same mine on September 23, 1957, when an explosion killed 6 of 11 men in the mine.[72]
The First Dawson Disaster was a mining accident on October 22, 1913, inDawson, New Mexicoin which 263 men died (146 were Italian and 36 were Greek).
The Second Dawson Disasters was a mining accident on February 8, 1923, in Dawson, New Mexico in which 123 men died.
TheSpeculator Mine Disasteroccurred in the copper mines ofButte, Montanaon June 8, 1917. An electric cable being lowered into the mine was accidentally ignited at 2,500 feet below the surface. The fire quickly climbed the cable, in turn igniting the shaft. The shaft thus became a chimney, eliminating the mine's primary source of oxygen. Nearly all of the 168 fatalities were due to asphyxia. It remains the deadliest underground hard rock mining event in American history.
TheHastings mine explosionwas a fire at the Victor-American Fuel Company coal mine in Hastings, Las Animas Country, Colorado, On April 27, 1917, in which 121 people died.
The Cherry Mine disaster was a fire in theCherry, Illinois,coal minein 1909, and surrounding events, in which 259 men and boys died.
From 1880 to 1910, mine accidents claimed thousands of fatalities. Where annual mining deaths had numbered more than 1,000 a year during the early part of the 20th century, they decreased to an average of about 500 during the late 1950s, and to 93 during the 1990s.[167]In addition to deaths, many thousands more are injured (an average of 21,351 injuries per year between 1991 and 1999), but overall there has been a downward trend of deaths and injuries.
In 1959, theKnox Mine Disasteroccurred inPort Griffith, Pennsylvania.The swellingSusquehanna Rivercollapsed into a mine under it and resulted in 12 deaths. InPlymouth, Pennsylvania,theAvondale Mine Disasterof 1869 resulted in the deaths of 108 miners and two rescue workers after a fire in the only shaft eliminated the oxygen in the mine. Federal laws for mining safety resulted from this disaster. Pennsylvania suffered another disaster in 2002 atQuecreek,9 miners were trapped underground and subsequently rescued after 78 hours. During 2006, 72 miners died at work, 47 by coal mining. The majority of these fatalities occurred inKentuckyandWest Virginia,including theSago Mine Disaster.[168][169]On April 5, 2010, in theUpper Big Branch Mine disasteran underground explosion caused the deaths of 29 miners.
TheU.S. Bureau of Mineswas created in 1910 to investigate accidents, advise industry, conduct production and safety research, and teach courses in accident prevention, first aid, andmine rescue.TheFederal Coal Mine Health and Safety Actsof 1969 and 1977 set further safety standards for the mining. Since the closure of the U.S. Bureau of Mines in 1996, this research function has been carried on by theNational Institute for Occupational Safety and Health(NIOSH). NIOSH maintains a list of mine disasters which occurred in the United States since 1839.[170]
^"Monongah Mine Disaster: Topics in Chronicling America".Library of Congress. 2024.Retrieved28 April2024.The Monongah Mine Disaster is widely considered to be the worst mine disaster in American history. On December 6, 1907, mines 6 and 8 of the Monongah Mine in West Virginia suffered a devastating explosion. The explosion destroyed much of the mine as well as the surface.
^Flynt, Wayne (2016).Poor But Proud.2880: University of Alabama Press.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: location (link)
North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers. Nicholas Wood Memorial Library"Mining accidents and safety: a guide to resources".2016. A guide to books, journals, inspectors' reports, government enquiries, legislation, archival material, etc. in the Institute Library relating to accidents and safety in the UK.