Tragedy at Pike River Mine : how and why 29 men died

Macfie, Rebecca

Notes
First edition Summary: On a sunny afternoon in November 2010, in the beautiful Paparoa Range of the South Island, a massive explosion rocked an underground coal mine. Later that day two ashen men stumbled from the entrance. Twenty-nine men remained unaccounted for. Initial probes revealed fatally high methane levels in the mine - conditions deemed unsurvivable for the trapped men. But it was only after a second blast five days later that all hope was extinguished. Tragedy at Pike River Mine is a dramatic, superbly researched and page-turning account of a disaster that should never have happened, of the dramatic political and legal fallout, and the effect on the small West Coast community. It reveals an appalling string of mistakes, from consent being given for the mine in the first place, to lack of proper monitoring equipment, pressure to ignore safety requirements, and effectively only a single exit. It puts a human face on the people who suffered, and provides penetrating insight on who's to blame. (Publisher)
Librarian's Miscellania
Physical Description: 275 pages, 36 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly colour), map
Curriculum Strand:
SubTitle: how and why 29 men died
MARC Import date: a true story of the Holocaust
MARC Record: 48 p, col. ill., maps
Location edition Bar Code due date
Special Needs Dept GCS00425