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News / Nation & World

Flash flooding traps 19 in cave

By CLAIRE GALOFARO and BRUCE SCHREINER, Associated Press
Published: May 26, 2016, 10:34pm
2 Photos
Tour guide Peggy Nims hugs a friend after she made it out of Hidden River Cave on Thursday. Nineteen people were trapped due to flash flooding in Horse Cave, Ky.
Tour guide Peggy Nims hugs a friend after she made it out of Hidden River Cave on Thursday. Nineteen people were trapped due to flash flooding in Horse Cave, Ky. (AUSTIN ANTHONY/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

HORSE CAVE, Ky. (AP) — A group of college students trapped by flash flooding on a field trip to a Kentucky cave Thursday walked through neck-deep water to get to safety, authorities said.

The 19 people who escaped more than six hours after entering Hidden River Cave included students from Clemson University, four tour guides and two police officers who became trapped when they tried to rescue the group, Kentucky State Police Trooper B.J. Eaton said.

There was no communication between the stranded cavers and the more than 150 emergency personnel at the scene. Authorities didn’t know exactly where the missing cavers were underground, and the only light the group had came from headlamps they wore.

The cavers became stranded in a portion of the cave known as “The Attic,” which has a higher ceiling, Eaton said in a release. They stayed there until deciding to find their way out as the water continued to rise, he said.

“When they came out of the cave, they were neck-deep in water,” Hart County Emergency Management Director Kerry McDaniel said.

“The waters were continuing to rise under the flash flood,” he added. “They saw an opportunity to exit the cave, so they took the chance.”

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