incident at New River Cave

Date
19th May 1979
Publication
ACA 1980-1981 p. 100
Cave
New River Cave
State
Virginia
County
Unknown
Country
United States of America
Category
Cave
Incident type
Caver fall
Group type
Cavers
Group size
Unknown
Aid type
Unknown
Source
Unknown
Incident flags
 

Injured cavers

No injured cavers recorded.

Incident report

At about 2 p.m. on Saturday, May 19, 1979, Scott M. Smith(20) and two companions were exploring in New River Cave in Giles County, Virginia. They were reportedly inexperienced and did not have proper equipment At about 5 p.m. Smith fell 20 feet from a mudbank and landed on some rocks in a stream. He suffered a gash on his head, between the eyes, where a pointed piece of chert was imbedded. His companions went for help. At 7 p.m. a Giles County Rescue Squad reached the victim. By that time, with soaked clothes, his body temperature had fallen quite low. The victim was placed in a litter and carried out by members of the VPI Cave Club with GCR members monitoring his condition. The route involved crawlways and both up and down-climbs. At about 1 a.m. the victim was placed in an ambulance and rushed to Montgomery County Hospital. Surgery was required to remove the rock splinter.

ANALYSIS: The hard mudbanks in caves can be quite steep and tall. Though one can kick small steps in them, for ascent or descent, they offer no purchase if one begins to slide or fall. They thus should be treated like any rock pitch - if a fall would likely result in serious injury, then the climb should be protected by a belay.

References

  1. REFERENCE: Edit. "New River Rescue, By the Media" The Tech Troglodyte Spring, 1979, p 16-18.
This record was last updated on 27th Apr 2024 at 23:11 UTC.