American Caver Mark Dickey Rescued After Getting Trapped 3,400 Feet Below Ground
American explorer Mark Dickey, who was trapped underground in a cave, is transported to an ambulance on a stretcher after he was rescued in Mersin, Turkey on Sept. 12, 2023.
Mark Dickey, the American explorer who fell ill 3,400 feet below the entrance to a cave in Turkey, has been rescued, officials said Monday.
The Turkish Caving Federation announced that Dickey was successfully escorted out of the cave just after midnight local time and was being transported to a local hospital for further treatment.
Dickey said shortly after his rescue it was “amazing to be above ground again,” adding he was in the cave “for far longer than ever expected,” CNN reported.
He called the experience a “crazy, crazy adventure.”
Mark Dickey was removed from the last exit of the cave at 00:37 and taken to the UMKE tent. Thus, the cave rescue part of the operation has ended successfully. We congratulate all those who have contributed! #MarkDickey#caverescue#Morca#tumaf@AFADBaskanlik
— Türkiye Mağaracılık Federasyonu (@tumaf1) September 11, 2023
His parents, Debbie and Andy Dickey, said Monday that they were “indescribably relieved” after his rescue.
“Mark is strong and we believe in his strength, but fully knew that he was in dire need of tremendous and immediate support,” they said in a statement released by the New Jersey Initial Response Team. “Our prayers have been, and are, being answered and it is hard to express the magnitude of thanks we have for the international caving community.”
Dickey, 40, is a seasoned caver and was on a trip to explore Turkey’s Morca cave, one of the country’s deepest cave systems. He is a cave rescuer himself, and an instructor and chief of the New Jersey Initial Response Team, a wilderness search and rescue program.
But he developed life-threatening bleeding and vomiting thousands of feet below ground, prompting a multinational rescue effort.
Rescue crews worked for days to help Dickey escape the cave, installing a complex network of ropes and anchors throughout the passageways to hoist a stretcher thousands of feet to the surface. Crews from half a dozen countries divided the cave into sections, using small hammers and explosives to make way for Dickey to be transported.
In this screenshot from video, American caver Mark Dickey, 40, talks to camera next to a colleague inside the Morca cave near Anamur, southern Turkey, on Sept. 7.
One-hundred ninety-six people from eight countries worked to help return Dickey to the surface.
Runners were needed to transport messages between rescue crews and the outside world, taking five to seven hours at times to share updates on his well-being.
“I do know that the quick response of the Turkish government to get the medical supplies that I need, in my opinion, saved my life,” Dickey said last week after he partially recovered. “I was very close to the edge.”
The caving world is a tight-knit community. Previous rescues have prompted similar outpourings of support and aid, including an episode in 2014 where an explorer was trapped in Germany’s deepest cave after injuring his head in a rock fall. It took rescuers 12 days to get him safely to the surface.
This article has been updated with Dickey’s comments.