The naturally formed thermal cave is about 1,500 feet long. Nutty Putty cave is actually a hole on the top of hill about seven miles west of State Road 68. "I wasn't able to see more because he was engulfed in the crevice itself." "I was only able to see his two feet that was hanging there in the crevice," Josh Jones said. "He thought he could kind of keep going on his belly down further, but it got to point where he couldn't go any further and he got wedged in," Stocking said. Jones was going head-first into the crevice when he got stuck. "It basically got to a point where we were trying to figure out if the cave went any further, and that's the route John decided to take," 25-year-old Joey Stocking of Logan told the Tribune. The group split up, with several children and some adults staying in a less dangerous area of the cave while others decided to explore further, 23-year-old Josh Jones, another brother, told The Salt Lake Tribune. "We were just looking forward to a good time," Mike Jones, the victim's 32-year-old brother, told The Salt Lake Tribune. Jones, a medical student at the University of Virginia, was part of a group of 11 people exploring the cave passages. He said crews had suspended efforts to free his body for the night, but would resume at first light. With whatever other factors there were, he did not survive," Cannon said.Ĭannon said a medical examiner would determine the exact cause of death later. "He was experiencing difficulty maintaining consciousness and breathing. In the hours after he became wedged again, Jones' physical condition deteriorated. Rescuers were able to get him food and water during that temporary freedom. The rescue effort at the cave, about 80 miles south of Salt Lake City, was slow throughout the day Wednesday with crews chipping away with air-powered tools in the narrow tunnel.Īt one point late in the afternoon, Jones was freed from the crevice, only to fall back several feet into the tight space when a cord that was supporting him failed, Cannon said The crevice where Jones was trapped was about 150 feet below ground in an L-shaped area of the cave known as "Bob's Push," which is only about 18 inches wide and 10 inches high, Cannon said. At times more than 50 rescuers were involved in trying to free him. The 6-foot-tall, 190-pound spelunker got stuck with his head at an angle below his feet about 9 p.m. "They were able to get close enough to verify that he was deceased." "They were right there with him, checking his vital signs," Cannon said. Rescuers were next to Jones for much of the day but he was wedged in a small hole too tightly to pull him out or even reach through to assist him, Cannon told The Associated Press. John Jones, 26, of Stansbury Park died about 12:30 a.m., nearly 28 hours after he became stuck 700 feet into the cave known as Nutty Putty, Utah County Sheriff's Department spokesman Sgt. A man stuck upside-down in a cave for more than a day died early Thursday, despite the efforts of dozens of rescuers, authorities said.
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