Nutty Putty cave sealed with  concrete
_ 
By Jason Bergreen 
The Salt Lake Tribune_ (mailto:jbergr...@sltrib.com?subject=Salt Lake 
Tribune: Nutty Putty cave sealed with concrete) 
Updated: 12/04/2009 12:09:24 AM  MST



The mouth of Nutty Putty Cave was sealed with concrete Thursday, turning 
the  cavern's 1,400 feet of chutes and tunnels into the final resting place of 
 26-year-old John Jones.  
Jones became stuck in the Utah County cave Nov. 25 and died after a 27-hour 
 effort by more than 135 rescuers to free him from a crevice.  
The Utah County Public Works Department used explosives earlier this week 
to  collapse part of the cave's ceiling, blocking an entrance deep inside 
near where  Jones' body remains stuck, said John Andrews, the chief legal 
counsel and  associate director for the School and Institutional Trust Lands 
Administration,  which owns the property.  
On Thursday, the throat of the narrow cave, a 7-foot deep, 30-inch wide 
hole,  was filled with concrete, Andrews said. Sheriff Jim Tracy told Andrews 
that no  other parts of the cave were damaged while the cave was sealed.  
The closure of the cave is not physically irreversible, Andrews said, but  
there are no plans to revisit the decision to close it.  
"It is permanently closed from our standpoint," he said.  
Jones' body remains where he became stuck, in a thin finger of the cave 
near  the end of the main passage about 100 feet below the surface and 400 feet 
from  the entrance.  
The Stansbury Park man entered the tight passage as he and a group of 
family  and friends fanned out to explore the cave. He was trapped head first 
at 
a  70-degree angle, with much of his waist and torso pinched in a 
10-inch-wide  space, authorities said.  
Rescuers briefly pulled the former Brigham Young University student from 
the  crevice using a pulley system and ropes tied to his feet, but he slipped 
back  into the tight space when an anchor broke free of the cave wall.  
Jones was not injured in the second fall, but struggled to breathe about 
two  hours later. When he fell silent, rescuers with medical training pushed a 
 stethoscope in the crevice and could not find a pulse. Jones was 
pronounced dead  at 11:57 p.m. He is thought to have died of the effects of the 
constant pressure  on his body.  
The popular cave, discovered by Dale Green in 1960, attracted up to 10,000  
people a year, despite its remote access at the top of a hill west of State 
Road  68. It was named for its soft brown "nutty putty" clay.  
There have been five high-profile rescues in the cave in the past 10 years, 
 and it was closed temporarily in 2004 after two people got stuck in 
separate  incidents within a week of each other.  
Andrews said SITLA will work with Jones' family concerning any future  
memorial on the site. So far, no specific plans have been finalized.  
_http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_13919224_ 
(http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_13919224) 

Reply via email to