Above And Beyond...

By BobsBlips

Aberfan

I don't really do flowers as most of you know, or infact much macro. Flowers are very pretty but probably not a man thing! A month ago I imported some Movo extension tubes to do some macro pictures. This  is my first attempt with the tubes this morning. Taken with the 16mm tube and 30-100mm zoom lens, manually focussed. It's a RAW exposure, processed in DXO Optics Pro, and uncropped.

Today is the 49th anniversary of The Aberfan disaster in South Wales. So my little bit of beauty to offset this really awful tradegy. Here's the facts.

Remembering the Aberfan disaster - 49 years ago today...October 21, 1966: A generation of children lost in Aberfan as coal waste engulfs school.Tragedy struck a Welsh mining village when thousands of tonnes of colliery waste roared down a hillside and crashed into a school, killing 116 children and 28 adults.

At 9.15am on the morning of this day in 1966 the small Welsh mining community of Aberfan was changed forever, when thousands of tons of waste from a coal tip poured down a hillside and engulfed a school and several homes, killing 144 people – 116 of them children.

The disaster occurred on the last day before half term, and only minutes after the pupils at Pantglas Junior School had returned to their classrooms after morning assembly. Waste material from the nearby Merthyr Vale colliery – known as ‘spoil’ – had been deposited on the slopes of Mynydd Merthyr, a broad ridge of high ground above the village containing numerous underground springs, for around 50 years. Unusually heavy rain had caused the waterlogged spoil to come loose and run down the hillside at increasing speed. In a matter of seconds, over 40,000 cubic metres of slurry smashed into the side of the school, filling classrooms with a wall of mud and rocks as deep as 10 metres in places.

Hundreds of villagers rushed to the scene, some mothers frantically clawing at the mud and waste with their bare hands in a desperate attempt to find any survivors. Miners from local collieries arrived in their droves to help dig through the rubble, but no survivor was recovered after 11am. By the following day, 2,000 emergency service workers and volunteers were involved in the rescue operation, of whom many had worked continuously for over 24 hours - despite this, it was nearly a week before all the bodies were recovered. All the children who died – nearly half of the pupils at Pantglas – were between the ages of seven and 10. Most of the victims were buried at a joint funeral at the village’s Bryntaf Cemetery on October 27 which was attended by more than 2,000 people.

Comments
Sign in or get an account to comment.