The man
behind the miracle
July 29, 2002
Posted: 1:31 PM EDT (1731 GMT)
By Jeff Goodell
Special to
CNN.com
SOMERSET,
Pennsylvania (CNN) – Just hours after the rescue, the drill site
already looks
like Disneyland. Tourists jam the road beside the place, snapping
pictures, posing
with the cranes in the background.
State troopers
guarding the site are bombarded with questions. Truck drivers
hauling out the
drill bits and generators wave like Super Bowl champions. Even
forklift
operators are treated like holy men.
This is, after
all, the site of a bona fide miracle.
Above the crowd,
in the shadow of one of the barns near the site, the man who is as
responsible for
that miracle as anyone leans against his red Chevy Blazer. Bob Long, 37,
is an engineer
technician for Civil Mining Environmental Engineering Inc. in Somerset. He's a
modest guy, dressed in shorts and Nike sandals, with three gold chains around
his neck.
In the back of
his Blazer is about $60,000 worth of high-tech surveying equipment
that Long used
in the early hours of the rescue operation to decide exactly where to
drill the first
hole that located the miners. It was a crucial decision -- and it may
well have been
the turning point of the entire rescue operation.
"If we
would have been wrong," Long says, "this might have been a recovery
operation, not a rescue."
Long had just
gone to bed last Wednesday night at his home in nearby Boswell,
Pennsylvania,
when he got a call from his boss, Sean Isgan, who told him about the
accident.
"We need
you and your GPS stuff down there right now," Isgan told him.
When Long
arrived at the scene, it was chaos. The rescue team quickly decided that the
first step would be to drill an exploratory hole, both to try locating the
miners and to begin blowing compressed air into the tunnel to create an air
bubble to keep the flooding waters at bay.
"The key
question was, 'Where exactly were these guys?'" Long recalls. "And we
were going to get them out by drilling a rescue shaft, where exactly do we
drill it?'"
The miners who
had escaped had told mine operators the general vicinity of their operations,
but where the men had gone to escape the flooding waters was unknowable.
Even if they
knew where they were, locating the spot from above was extraordinarily
difficult. An error of a few feet either way or they might miss the tunnel
entirely.
Drilling even a
6-inch hole 300 feet down took hours, and they did not have the luxury of
poking around until they found the men.
First hole
had to be right
If they wanted
to get these men out alive, the first hole had to be right.
The first step
was to consult mine maps. Working with Joe Sbaffoni of the state Department of Environmental
Protection and other mine rescue experts, they noted the general slope of the
mine, figured out the high ground the workers might retreat to, and picked a
spot on the map to drill.
It was up to
Long, with help from Isgan, to translate the spot on the map to a spot on the
ground. To add even more risk to the operation, a closer look at the mining map
revealed that an underground gas line ran very close to drilling spot.
If that map was
off, or Long made a mistake in his calculations, there could be some real
fireworks when the drill bit hit the gas pipe.
Working
frantically, Long set up his GPS surveying equipment. Global positioning
satellite
systems are a high-tech device used in everything from minivans to smart bombs.
They work by triangulating radio signals between a low-orbit satellite, a fixed
point, a third (and often moving) point.
The better the
GPS system, the more accurate it is, and Long's equipment is top-of-the line --
essentially the same one used by the U.S. military.
"It's
accurate within less than a centimeter," Long said.
He set up some
general coordinates in the field nearby and took some readings to get oriented.
Then he entered the mine map coordinates into his laptop and translated them to
his GPS system.
He then grabbed
a small hand-held device called a "rover" and began walking in the general
direction of the spot they had picked out.
The satellite
beamed down information to the transmitter he had set up on a tripod, which
relayed the signal to the rover, eventually guiding him to a spot very close to
an access road
near the highway.
At about 1:15
a.m. Thursday -- not much more than an hour after he had arrived -- Long held
his breath and drove a stake into the ground: that was the spot they would
drill.
Anxious
moments
As the rig
positioned itself over the spot, Long was nearly unwound by anxiety.
"What if
we'd have been off by three feet, and hit one of the mine pillars? We'd have
had no idea it was a pillar, or if we'd missed the tunnel by an inch or a mile.
"Basically,
we'd have had to just throw all the maps into the trash and just drill 10 feet
this way, 10 feet that way, until we found the tunnel. Who knows how long it might
have taken?"
As the drill bit
began chewing into the earth, Long left to do some more surveying in another
area.
About an hour
and a half later, he returned, just in time to hear that the drill bit had broken
through to the tunnel.
He was thrilled,
but not as thrilled as he was about five minutes later, when he heard nine
distinct metallic clangs -- the sound of the trapped men pounding on the drill
bit with their mining hammers.
"It was the
sweetest sound I've ever heard," Long said, smiling broadly.
Jeff Goodell
is the author of "Sunnyvale: The Rise and Fall of a Silicon Valley Family."
He is working on a book about coal and energy in the United States.