carnkie
  • carnkie
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17 years ago
Someone may have already mentioned this and I missed it; if so just ignore. From the PDMHS;

WARNING - LONG RAKE SPAR MINE - PLEASE READ

On the weekend of 24/25 May 2008 two cavers were taken seriously ill with Carbon Monoxide poisoning in Long Rake Mine on Bradwell Moor. The source of the Carbon Monoxide is not known and DCA are advising that cavers should not descend Long Rake until further notice.

The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.
Captain Scarlet
17 years ago
Thats very scary !
Thanks for the warning.
STANDBY FOR ACTION!!!!...
Vanoord
17 years ago
Thanks Carnkie :)

I've stuck this thread to the top of the homepage.
Hello again darkness, my old friend...
AR
  • AR
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17 years ago
It's a bit of a puzzle as to why there's CO rather than CO2 in the mine - at the moment, the suggestion doing the rounds is that blasting fumes from Hope quarry or one of the Bradwell Moor spar workings are seeping through joints in the limestone. It's still a nasty shock to know that it's lurking in one of the mines out there, especially as I'm going into Moorfurlong mine next week.....
Follow the horses, Johnny my laddie, follow the horses canny lad-oh!
carnkie
  • carnkie
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17 years ago
I suppose you could take along a CO alarm just to be on the safe side.
The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.
Brakeman
17 years ago
I would agree about taking a calibrated gas/air monitor along, have been on a trip recently in a fairly large mine where I thought the air quality should be ok, how wrong was I?

The warning alarm sounded in a main level and at a place that was unexpected, not in some narrow old mans workings.


The management thanks you for your co operation.
carnkie
  • carnkie
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17 years ago
"AR" wrote:

It's a bit of a puzzle as to why there's CO rather than CO2 in the mine - at the moment, the suggestion doing the rounds is that blasting fumes from Hope quarry or one of the Bradwell Moor spar workings are seeping through joints in the limestone. It's still a nasty shock to know that it's lurking in one of the mines out there, especially as I'm going into Moorfurlong mine next week.....



I can imagine. There was a case in a Mexico mine of a miner dying of CO poisoning after blasting but that is not a good analogy really in this case. Although it's the only source that appears credible. As CD once said; How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?

I wonder. It appears from what I know ( which is very little) that this is the only source of CO in the area. There are in fact very few others. Indeed a bit of a dangerous mystery.

The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.
AR
  • AR
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  • Newbie
17 years ago
"carnkie" wrote:

I suppose you could take along a CO alarm just to be on the safe side.



Fortunately, one of my co-explorers who'll be coming on the Moorfurlong trip does posess a good underground gas detector - I'll make sure I ask him to bring it along!
Follow the horses, Johnny my laddie, follow the horses canny lad-oh!

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