Injured German researcher rescued from deep cave

This screenshot from a video provided by the Bavarian Mountain Rescue Service on Tuesday June 17, 2014 shows rescuers transporting cave explorer Johann Westhauser in Riesending cave near Marktschellenberg near Berchtesgarden, Germany, Germany’s mountain rescue service says it could complete the rescue of the injured cave researcher from the country’s deepest cave on Thursday or Friday as experts make good progress through the labyrinth’s passages and shafts. Johann Westhauser suffered head injuries nearly 1,000 meters (3,280 feet) underground in the Riesending cave system, in the Alps near the Austrian border, on June 8. AP

BERLIN — An injured German cave researcher was brought out of the country’s deepest cavern on Thursday at the end of a spectacular rescue operation that lasted nearly a week.

Johann Westhauser sustained head injuries in a rock fall June 8 while nearly 1,000 meters (3,280 feet) underground in the Riesending cave system, in the Alps near the Austrian border. Rescue teams embarked Friday on the arduous task of hauling him up through the labyrinth of narrow passages and precipitous vertical shafts.

After a short pause overnight, rescuers resumed work early Thursday morning and brought Westhauser the final 180 meters (590 feet) to the surface just before noon, Germany’s mountain rescue service said.

A fit expert could scale the distance from the site of the accident to the entrance in about 12 hours, but rescuers had to haul Westhauser on a stretcher through the challenging terrain. The entrance to the cave is on a mountainside, some 1,800 meters (5,900 feet) above sea level.

Westhauser, whose condition has been described as stable, was being treated by medical experts outside the cave.

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