Current:Home > FinanceTurkey cave rescue of American Mark Dickey like "Himalayan Mountain climbing" underground, friend says -EliteFunds
Turkey cave rescue of American Mark Dickey like "Himalayan Mountain climbing" underground, friend says
View
Date:2025-04-16 19:28:07
Scores of international rescuers had descended by Friday on a cave in southern Turkey, as the plan to save American caver Mark Dickey took shape. Dickey, a speleologist or cave expert, fell ill last weekend while helping to chart Turkey's Morca cave system — the country's third deepest and sixth longest — leaving him stuck more than 3,200 underground.
Rescuers finally reached him around the middle of the week. The long, slow ascent was expected to begin as soon as Friday.
"I'm alert, I'm talking, but I'm not healed on the inside yet," Dickey said in a video clip that emerged from the depths Thursday, in which he's seen speaking with the rescuers who brought him desperately needed blood and other fluids.
"I do know that the quick response of the Turkish government to get the medical supplies that I need, in my opinion, saved my life. I was very close to the edge," the veteran U.S. cave scientist said in the video, shared by Turkish officials.
His stomach started bleeding on September 2 as he explored the cave with a handful of others, including several other Americans. With Dickey, himself a cave rescuer, unable to climb out on his own steam, volunteers from across Europe rushed to the scene and climbed in.
The open cross-section of the Morca Cave. Mark is currently residing at the campsite at 1040 meters from the entrance. It takes a full ~15h for an experienced caver to reach to the surface in ideal conditions. The cave features narrow winding passages and several rappels. pic.twitter.com/yP2almvEDf
— Türkiye Mağaracılık Federasyonu (@tumaf1) September 5, 2023
Dickey, 40, got stuck in a section of the cave system known serendipitously as "Camp Hope." From there, the return path will cover a distance more than double the height of the Empire State Building, with tight squeezes, tight turns and frigid water.
Carl Heitmeyer, a friend of Dickey's and fellow cave rescuer based in New Jersey, equated the extraction to "Himalayan Mountain climbing," but for cavers.
"When you're fit and strong you can make that climb… you can squirm through, you can twist your body, you can contort yourself," he told CBS News. "When you're feeling sick, this is all very strenuous activity."
Dickey and his rescuers will be working in the dark, in 40-degree cold, drenched from pools and waterfalls. Depending on Dickey's condition, they may decide to haul him out on a stretcher, at least part of the way, painstakingly connecting and disconnecting him from about 70 rope systems.
"If they make it from where he's at to intermediate camp — 300 meters in one day — I think it's reasonable to expect they can continue onward," said Heitmeyer. "One concern I have if his body is trying to heal itself and bleeds… it may open those wounds back up."
A healthy caver could make the ascent in about 15 hours. But getting Dickey out is expected to take at least a few days, and in a worst-case scenario, it could be two weeks or more before he's brought to the surface.
Dickey himself said that caving and cave rescues often present "a great opportunity to show just how well the international world can work together."
With more than 150 rescuers from across Europe now on hand to help get him back into daylight, his sentiment appeared well-founded.
- In:
- Rescue
- cave rescue
- Turkey
Ramy Inocencio is a foreign correspondent for CBS News based in London and previously served as Asia correspondent based in Beijing.
TwitterveryGood! (794)
Related
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Taylor Drift and Clark W. Blizzwald take top honors in Minnesota snowplow-naming contest
- Florida man sentenced to 30 months for stealing sports camp tuition to pay for vacations, gambling
- White House-hosted arts summit explores how to incorporate arts and humanities into problem-solving
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Somalia’s intelligence agency says it blocks WhatsApp groups used by al-Qaida-linked militants
- Essentials to Keep You Warm When You’re Freezing Your Butt off Outside
- Haiti pushes forward with new program to boost police department overwhelmed by gangs
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- The arts span every facet of life – the White House just hosted a summit about it
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- 4 dead, including Florida man suspected of shooting and wounding 2 police officers
- Could the 2024 presidential election affect baby name trends? Here's what to know.
- Maine governor says that despite challenges the ‘state is getting stronger every day’
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Kristin Juszczyk receives NFL licensing rights after making custom jacket for Taylor Swift
- Bill to ban guns at polling places in New Mexico advances with concerns about intimidation
- Navy veteran Joe Fraser launches GOP campaign to oust Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar in Minnesota
Recommendation
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
How Jenna Bush Hager juggles 'Today' show, book club: Reading, 'designer coffee,' this ritual
El Salvador VP acknowledges ‘mistakes’ in war on gangs but says country is ‘not a police state’
Is it illegal to record a conversation at work? Ask HR
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Kourtney Kardashian Twins With Baby Rocky in New Photo
Western monarch butterflies overwintering in California dropped by 30% last year, researchers say
Toyota warns drivers of 50,000 vehicles to stop driving immediately and get cars repaired