Author Topic: Big BOOM! in Utah  (Read 3221 times)

Zundfolge

  • friend
  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 143
Big BOOM! in Utah
« on: August 10, 2005, 06:12:58 PM »
Source



Quote
Tanker Truck Explodes, Highway 6 Shut Down
August 10th, 2005 @ 6:46pm

Team Coverage

A semi truck carrying nearly 20 tons of explosives crashed and exploded in Spanish Fork Canyon this afternoon. The blast left a huge crater in the road and tore up the railroad tracks that run alongside.

There are at least five injured and the road is closed. And that means long detours for many motorists tonight, trying to find other ways around Spanish Fork Canyon.

The semi apparently loaded up explosives this morning in Spanish Fork and was heading east, out of the state. They were on Highway 6, about 10 miles up from Thistle Junction when something happened, causing the semi to crash and turn over.

Witnesses say other drivers stopped and pulled the driver of the semi outside of his cab just before it exploded. Debris went in all directions, sparking fires on both sides of the canyon. The blast left a huge crater in the road  30 feet deep and at least 60 feet wide. The blast also caused damage to railroad tracks that run parallel to the highway.

The cars that had pulled over near the accident were also damaged in the blast. It broke the windows of those cars. Several people were transported to the hospital by ground and by helicopter.

The driver of the truck, a man in his early 30's, was flown to the University of Utah medical center. He was conscious and talking when he arrived at the ER. Three other people were taken to Utah Valley Regional Medical Center in Provo. Two are in critical condition, one satisfactory. Of the two in critical condition, one was in the sleeper cab of the wrecked truck, the other was in another diesel truck nearby. The fifth victim was flown to LDS Hospital. That patient just arrived and is still being evaluated by the trauma team.


Highway 6 is a two-lane highway and a major artery to the southeastern part of the state. It will be closed for quite some time as the blast completely destroyed a portion of the road, including the supporting material.

A robot from the Utah County Sheriff's office is being sent to the scene to figure out how to safely deal with about 60 pounds of explosives that have not yet exploded. It is a powerful explosive material, obviously.

Mark Carlton, Witness: "We were just sitting there waiting for someone to come fix our tire about 2:00 or so, and heard a loud explosion. A big old crater in the road, blown out tracks, sent shrapnel over the mountainside and everything."

Kirby Glad, Witness: "When the truck blew it pretty much diminished the entire truck. There is probably just an axle left. You could see the engine block over off on the side of the road and smoldering pieces of the truck were up, probably as high as 40 feet up the side of the hill. It left about a 35 foot crater in the road and took out the railroad tracks next to the road. About ten cars had their windshields forced in or completely blown out."


Some of that shrapnel that landed on the mountainside is still causing smoke and fire. The forest service is sending in an aircraft to start putting out those smoldering spots to prevent a wildfire from breaking out.

This accident is causing a traffic disaster tonight for many drivers. There is no doubt the highway will have to be completely reconstructed. UDOT is still waiting to get their crews onto the scene to assess the damage, and expect it will be a matter of hours before they can get into there. They say it will be a significant fix once repairs can begin.

If you're headed from Moab to Price and on to Helper, take I-15 to I-70 East.

If you're traveling North from Price, take US Highway 191 through Indian Canyon, from there to US 40, on to Duchesne.

Union Pacific is also waiting to assess damage to their railroad tracks.

Sindawe

  • friend
  • Senior Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,938
  • Vashneesht
Big BOOM! in Utah
« Reply #1 on: August 10, 2005, 07:00:51 PM »
WHOA, bummer dude.  Glad that no one was killed.
I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do.

Justin

  • friend
  • Senior Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 622
Big BOOM! in Utah
« Reply #2 on: August 10, 2005, 07:45:01 PM »
The authorities have gone on to state that a Mr. Wile E. Coyote is presumed to be unharmed, but is wanted for questioning regarding the twenty tons of ACME brand explosives.
Your secretary is not a graphic designer, and Microsoft Word is not adequate for print design.

Azrael256

  • friend
  • Senior Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,083
Big BOOM! in Utah
« Reply #3 on: August 10, 2005, 09:28:25 PM »
That is an absolutely amazing image.  I hope the folks injured in the blast wil be ok.  I guess nobody got it on video, but I'll bet it was an awesome sight.

Jamisjockey

  • Booze-fueled paragon of pointless cruelty and wanton sadism
  • friend
  • Senior Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 26,580
  • Your mom sends me care packages
Big BOOM! in Utah
« Reply #4 on: August 11, 2005, 05:47:39 AM »
That highway is freaking dangerous.  There are crashes on it all the time.
http://web.ksl.com/dump/news/cc/trans/hwysix.htm

Looks like the injuries are up to 10
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,600155076,00.html
Quote
Blast closes canyon: Truck tips over, explodes; at least 10 people hurt
By Sara Israelsen, Tad Walch and Laura Hancock
Deseret Morning News

      SPANISH FORK CANYON  Metal shards, frayed pieces of tire and an engine block were all that was left of a truck carrying 38,000 pounds of explosives after the cargo detonated Wednesday afternoon on U.S. 6 in Spanish Fork Canyon.

The explosion left a crater 30 feet deep and caused hillside fires.

Stuart Johnson, Deseret Morning News
      The truck's driver was going too fast, officials said, which caused the truck to jack-knife on one of the canyon's first sharp turns. The truck tipped over, skidded across the pavement and started a fire on the mountainside.
      The flames reached the explosives and sparked a massive explosion just before 2 p.m. Wednesday, leaving only the truck's engine block and a mangled axle. The blast carved a hole in the road 30 feet deep and about 70 feet wide and propelled concrete barriers into the Spanish Fork River hundreds of yards away.
      The force of the blast also sent out concussion waves that shattered windshields and crumpled car frames and left many of the witnesses with temporary hearing loss.
      Motorists who stopped to help the driver out of the burning truck began running or driving away after one driver told people at the scene that the semitrailer truck was carrying explosives. At least 10 people were injured when the truck exploded.
      The truck had picked up its load shortly after 1 p.m. at Ensign-Bickford Industries, an explosives company in Spanish Fork, and headed up the canyon with a shipment bound for Oklahoma.
      Troy Lysfjord of Blackfoot, Idaho, a passenger in the truck carrying the explosives, was transported via helicopter to Utah Valley Regional Medical Center in critical condition. He was later upgraded to fair condition and is expected to be released today.
      The truck's driver, Travis Stewart of Rexburg, Idaho, was flown by helicopter ambulance to University Hospital. He was in fair condition Wednesday night.
      The exact number of injuries is unknown because some of the individuals drove themselves to hospitals with minor injuries, such as cuts or bruises, said Utah Highway Patrol trooper Jay J. Przybyla. In addition to UVRMC, patients were treated at LDS Hospital, the University of Utah Medical Center and hospitals in Payson and Price.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
      Six were at Castle View Hospital in Price. All were treated for minor injuries and released. At LDS Hospital, the driver of a car behind the truck, Art Rigoli, was treated for minor injuries and released.
      Lysfjord was the co-driver and has been professionally driving a truck more than five years. The driving partners have gone through the canyon numerous times, Lysfjord said. He was trying to get some sleep in the back of the cab when the truck rolled.
      "I could feel it lean to the right . . . ; the next thing I knew I was being slammed" against the cab, he said. That's when he received most of his injuries, which were cuts and scrapes.
      He found Stewart, whom he calls a friend, and helped get him out of the seatbelt. Stewart ran from the truck and Lysfjord followed.
      Lysfjord estimates that about 3 minutes passed between the rollover and explosion. He was about 75 yards away. He was in and out of consciousness in the canyon but said he tried his best to warn people to get away, maybe at the expense of his own safety.
      "I spent way too much time trying to get people to move. They didn't move fast enough," he said. "That's hard to do when people don't listen. They're just curious, I guess."
      Mapleton resident J.D. Herbert, who was treated for injuries at UVRMC, was traveling through the canyon and was thrown off his motorcycle by the explosion. He tried to seek shelter behind a minivan.
      "The mom was screaming and her kids were crying," Herbert said. "Shrapnel (was) hitting the forest and crackling like bacon."

A victim arrives at University Hospital.

Stuart Johnson, Deseret Morning News
      In all, eight people sought treatment at the Provo hospital, said Janet Frank, spokeswoman for UVRMC.
      "The blast was hard enough to blow out windows," Utah Highway Patrol Sgt. Al Christianson said. "That's pretty significant."
      He compared the blast to a war-zone-type incident, and the site was still being monitored for undetonated explosives into the evening.
      The explosive devices that were in the truck  small orange tubes nearly 10 inches long  are used in seismic exploration and are normally safe. However, the intense heat of the fire was too much, and all but 60 pounds exploded, said UHP Lt. Kenneth B. Peay.
      The truck was following federal regulations, according to the Utah Department of Transportation and company officials.
      "It is up to the United States Department of Transportation to regulate and issue permits, but as far as we know, this truck had the necessary permits to carry whatever it was carrying," said Nile Easton, spokesman for the UDOT. He said rules and regulations pertaining to the transport of hazardous materials are left up to the federal government to ensure uniformity across the states where big rigs travel.
      Because of the blast, the highway is impassible, and nearby railroad tracks were bent like pipe cleaners. There is no timeline yet as to when the tracks will be ready again. The line is used by Union Pacific Railroad, Amtrak and for coal transportation.
      Amtrak officials said they are holding a passenger train in Grand Junction, Colo., that would have had to pass through Spanish Fork Canyon.
      Paul Crespin, manager of track maintenance for Union Pacific Railroad, has been working on the line for 34 years and said he had never seen anything like this accident.

Investigators look over the mangled remains of the truck Wednesday in Spanish Fork Canyon.

Stuart Johnson, Deseret Morning News
      "It's not good," he said after returning from the blast site. "Not good at all."
      Construction crews were on the way up the canyon by early evening with the goal of opening the road by this weekend, said Brent Wilhite, Utah Department of Transportation spokesman.
      "Our number 1 goal is to make sure the area is safe," he said. "We will work around the clock to get this road open ASAP."
      UDOT will use its emergency funds to repair the road, but once everything is fixed, Wilhite said, there will be talks with the company's insurance group about restitution.
      However, construction crews will not just be focusing on clearing, refilling and repaving the road. They also must create support for the side of the mountain.
      The blast shaved the mountainside, sending car-size boulders down on the road, and ignited several small fires.
      On top of the mountain, the blast also knocked down three power poles, disturbing phone service for the surrounding area. Scofield was the largest town affected.
      Helicopters circled the area Wednesday afternoon, giving county crews a different look at the devastation. UHP pilot Steve Rugg had recently returned from serving as a pilot in Afghanistan and said this damage was incredible, much more damaging than anything he saw during the war.
      "I never saw bomb craters as big as that one," he said.

JD

 The price of a lottery ticket seems to be the maximum most folks are willing to risk toward the dream of becoming a one-percenter. “Robert Hollis”