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Thai cave rescue: What next for the trapped boys?

  •  06 July 2018
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  • Asia
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The Thai cave complex where 12 boys and their football coach are trapped is a snaking system of caverns and crevices which pose a range of problems for rescuers.

Cave complex from above and cross-section
Presentational white space

Some stretches of the Tham Luang cave are more than 10 metres high, while others are a tight squeeze through water-filled passages.

The death of an experienced former Thai Navy diver who was part of a team trying to supply the boys' cave with oxygen tanks re-emphasised the dangers of the mission.

The group of boys and their coach were exploring the caves when a sudden storm caused the passageways to flood, trapping them inside. They had spent nine days in the cave with little food or light when they were discovered on Monday.

Image copyrightAFP/ROYAL THAI NAVYPhoto of the Thai boys when divers first found them

Their rescue could take months as the group must either be taught to dive or wait for the water to recede or be pumped out.

Could the boys escape by diving?

Rescue divers with specialist breathing equipment reached the group through a series of water-filled passages. The boys may have to be taken out the same way.

The Thai Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan said rescuers were now teaching the boys how to swim and dive.

Image copyrightAFPA Thai rescue worker prepares a full-face diving mask, 3 July 2018
Image captionFull-face masks are easier for beginners because they do not rely on a mouthpiece

Rescuers are hoping to give the boys full-face masks and install dive lines and dive bottles of compressed air along the tunnels, possibly with glow sticks to light the path.

The diving option is considered extremely dangerous by some, but British dive experts say the priority is to get the boys out before the rains bring more flooding and debris into the system.

Martin Grass, Chairman of the Cave Diving Group, says he expects the boys will be given full-face masks, light wetsuits and be shown how to use diving flippers, known as fins.

He said the rescuers instructing them would probably tell them not to hold their breath, to use their fins slowly and breathe gently.

How Thai Navy Seal divers might guide boys to safety

Illustration showing how divers might bring boys out of the flooded cave

Mr Grass says depending on the size of the boys, they may carry their own air bottle or a rescue diver may carry it for them.

"Each boy would have at least one or two rescue divers who would look after them to make sure they don't panic," he said.

The boys could also be tethered to a diver so there was no risk of them getting lost in the fast flowing, murky water.

"It could be a bonus that the boys are young. When you're young, you feel invincible and they'd see it as a bit of an adventure," he said.

Image copyrightTHAI NAVY SEALSThai Navy Seals in the cave
Image captionMost cave divers dive with air tanks to the side of them. The Thai Navy Seals wear them on their backs

The boys could spend 10 to 15 minutes under water at a time, depending how much of the passageways are flooded. But the journey back to the entrance, which also involved walking and scrambling through narrow spaces, could take a while.

It has taken rescuers 11 hours to complete a round trip of to the group and back - six hours there and five back.

While the pumping continues to try to reduce the flooding, Mr Grass said he expected the advice from the British divers at the scene would be to get them out as soon as possible.

"With the monsoon coming, you don't know how high that water will rise."

Cave rescue hazards

Waiting and pumping

The group could wait until the water levels drop - with food and other essentials delivered by regular diving supply trips.

Then, they could safely leave on foot.

A round-the-clock pumping operation is in place, taking millions of litres of water out of the caves so far and reducing the flooding by one centimetre an hour, reports say.

Image copyrightGETTY IMAGESPumping water from the cave where the boys are trapped

But however much they pump out, the water is being fed by sinkholes and streams in the hills above and when monsoon rains arrive, there is the chance the space they are living in could flood completely.

Chiang Rai provincial governor Narongsak Osottanakorn said the mission was "a race against the water".

"Our biggest concern is the weather. We are calculating how much time we have if it rains, how many hours and days," he told reporters.

Drilling down - less feasible

Authorities have tried to drill holes in the cave walls to help drain some of the flood water - although the thick rock has hampered efforts.

There have also been suggestions that drilling could be another way to get to the boys and airlift them out.

But to even begin the process, new roads would need to be built up above the caves to accommodate the heavy drilling equipment needed to break through the rock.

Image copyrightEPAAuthorities in Thailand trying to drill holes to release flood waters from the cave complex June 2018
Image captionAuthorities have tried to drill holes to let out flood waters

A detailed survey of the area would also be needed - otherwise there would be little chance of digging a hole in the right place to reach the boys and their coach.

Graphic showing cave network and rescue route
Presentational white space

What are the dangers down there?

The boys, aged between 11 and 16, and their 25-year-old coach, are huddled on a small rock ledge. The environment is wet, so they must keep warm and dry or risk hypothermia.

Rock falls are a threat, but the main concern for rescue teams is rising flood levels. Storm waters could complicate access routes, threaten the supply of air into the chamber and hamper evacuation attempts.

There are concerns about the level of oxygen in the air in the space where the boys are trapped. Officials said the level of oxygen in the air had fallen to 15%. The usual level is 21%.

Rescuers have been transferred about 100 oxygen tanks to the cave to help improve the air supply.

Thai diver PO Saman had been helping transfer the tanks when he got into difficulties on the way back and did not have enough air himself. He died after losing consciousness in one of the passageways and his colleagues could not revive him.

Diver Ben Reymenants is assisting with the rescue mission and says none of the boys can swim
Image captionDiver Ben Reymenants is assisting with the rescue mission and says none of the boys can swim

Read more: What to do to survive underground

How life in darkness affects humans

How will the Thai cave boys cope underground?

What help are they being given?

Much-needed food and medical supplies, including fresh water and paracetamol - reached the boys and their coach on Tuesday. Rescuers are now transferring supplies to the boys to build up their nutrient levels, so their daily intake over the next seven days will be:

  • Mineral water with added vitamins - 1,000 ml per person
  • Medicated liquid food - 1,000ml per person.

Officials say most of the group are unhurt, although some are weak or have minor injuries. A doctor and nurse are with them, and will decide whether they are strong enough to be moved.

 

In the meantime, divers have been taking hundreds of compressed air tanks into the cave, and are preparing to establish a base camp inside the chamber.

How will they deal with mental strain?

The boys may have had torches or lights on mobile phones, but they have potentially been sitting in the dark for hours.

So rescue teams have been taking lighting into the chamber, and keeping the group company.

Divers have also been preparing power and telephone lines to enable the boys to speak with their parents.

Image copyrightFACEBOOK/EKATOL
Image captionA Facebook photo shows the coach with some of the young footballers

"They're mentally stable which is actually pretty good," Ben Reymenants, a Belgian diver helping with the rescue operation, told AFP news agency.

"Luckily the coach had the sanity of mind to keep them all together, huddled together to conserve their energy, that basically saved them."


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This reminds me of the old Kirk Douglas movie Ace in the hole.

Tuff movie won't spoil the ending incase some of you wanna watch it.

They saying it could take months to get the boys out.

Supposedly a big rainfall will done the dance aswell.

1 of the divers died on his return to the surface last night, was ex navy seal and National triathlete.

Does not pose well for a group of young boys.

You think they can get them out safely?

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RIP to the guy who died trying to rescue them, hope he’s got a space in heaven for that. 

I’ve been following this since it broke, can’t imagine how those boys are feeling. Absolutely fucked situation, seems like all the options on the table aren’t favourable. 

Heard some of the brits out there are helping out doing translation duties, and now Elons getting involved too. Great to hear people are coming together from all over.

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This is mental

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14 hours ago, VENOM said:

boys coach seen as a hero.... 

uk/us jell be fired..and sued..family would be hounded

Definitely not a hero

Why were they in there? Some children's parents didn't let them go cos they thought it would be too dangerous

At best he is wildly careless

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