Buried alive: スキーヤー comes 支援する from 'dead' after 15 minutes entombed by 雪崩/(抗議などの)殺到

  • Rhianna Shaw could not move, and her friends could not hear her 叫び声をあげるs
  • 動きやすい phone was (犯罪の)一味ing in her pocket, but she could not answer
  • Friends formed chain across mountain and retraced their steps
  • They used ski 政治家s to 調査(する) for her 団体/死体 and 結局 設立する her
  • She was clinically dead when pulled out, but 生き返らせるd when given CPR

Terrified: Rhianna Shaw, 23, was entombed in the snow for an incredible 15 minutes after an avalanche on the Austrian mountain where she was skiing

Terrified: Rhianna Shaw, 23, was entombed in the snow for an incredible 15 minutes after an 雪崩/(抗議などの)殺到 on the Austrian mountain where she was skiing

A British スキーヤー has 生き残るd after she was buried alive in an 雪崩/(抗議などの)殺到 and 宣言するd clinically dead.

Rhianna Shaw, 23, was entombed in the snow for 15 minutes に引き続いて the 事故 in the Austrian mountains.

There is only a six per cent chance of resuscitation once someone has been buried in 深い snow for eight m inutes.

行方不明になる Shaw, from Chichester, West Sussex, said yesterday it was ‘絶対 terrifying’ as she could not move and her friends could not hear her 叫び声をあげるs for help.

She said: ‘There was several feet of snow on 最高の,を越す of me. You usually think snow will move but it just 始める,決めるs like 固める/コンクリート around you.

‘I was 絶対 frozen and? I couldn’t move an インチ. I could just about make out which way was up as a little bit of light was coming through and I could hear faint sounds.

‘All I could do was 叫び声をあげる for help, but no one could hear me.

‘They thought I might have skied off and I could hear my 動きやすい (犯罪の)一味ing in my pocket but I couldn’t answer it. It was 絶対 terrifying.’

The 事故 happened on Thursday last week when 行方不明になる Shaw, who is spending the ski season working in Austria, was skiing off piste 近づく St Anton with five friends. She had been out on the same slopes several times before.

She said: ‘We hadn’t had snow for a couple of weeks then lots (機の)カム 負かす/撃墜する and it was a lovely sunny day so we decided to go out. Remarkable: Medics were astonished Rhianna, pictured here being dug out of the snow, had survived as there is only a six per cent chance of resuscitation once you are buried for more than eight minutes


Remarkable: Medics were astonished Rhianna, pictured here 存在 dug out of the snow, had 生き残るd as there is only a six per cent chance of resuscitation once you are buried for more than eight minutes

‘We went 一連の会議、交渉/完成する this one bit and me and my friend Alistair were coming 負かす/撃墜する 味方する by 味方する and he was on a snowboard and we had a minor 衝突/不一致 and I lost both skis.

‘It 普通は wouldn’t be a problem but it started a bit of 降雪. Then the others (機の)カム 負かす/撃墜する and a 大規模な ledge of 降雪 broke away and it carried me 負かす/撃墜する the slope around 150 metres.

‘I was 完全に buried alive and no part of me was above the surface. I would rather have not been conscious but I was.

‘I couldn’t move, my 武器 were frozen. The most I could do was shriek, but they couldn’t hear me. I tried not to panic.’

She 借りがあるs her life to her quick-thinking friends, who formed a chain across the mountain and retraced their steps, using? ski 政治家s to 調査(する) the snow as they searched for her. They 設立する the 支援する of her 脚 and managed to dig her out.

Scenic: Rhianna Shaw was skiing at the Austrian resort of St Anton when she buried alive by an avalanche

Scenic: Rhianna Shaw was skiing at the Austrian 訴える手段/行楽地 of St Anton when she buried alive by an 雪崩/(抗議などの)殺到< /p>

By this time, 行方不明になる Shaw was clinically dead as she had no pulse and was not breathing. But one of her friends gave her CPR ? and against the 半端物s, it worked.

She 追加するd: ‘I must have been buried for at least 15 minutes and probably stayed conscious for five minutes.

‘I was conscious I was 罠にかける and I would probably die. There is only a six per cent chance of resuscitation once you are pulled out of the snow like that so I was incredibly lucky.’

After 11 minutes buried under the snow, most スキーヤーs die. 行方不明になる Shaw was taken to hospital by ヘリコプター and put on a drip. A week on, she is ‘doing 井戸/弁護士席’ but still haunted by the 事故.

She said: ‘It 攻撃する,衝突するs me at strange times. It’s like a weird bad? dream. I won’t be going off piste again in a hurry.’

St Anton was one of the 訴える手段/行楽地s 削減(する) off after 10ft of 砕く fell? in the Austrian アルプス山脈 in just? 48 hours last month, leaving all roads in and out of the village の近くにd and an 概算の 1,000 British tourists stuck.

雪崩/(抗議などの)殺到 専門家 Rudi Mair said at the time: ‘This is a type of 降雪 the like of which we have not seen for years. 連合させるd with that, there are very high 勝利,勝つd which are making 条件s 特に dangerous.’

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