My name is Doug Copp. I am the Rescue
Chief and Disaster Manager of the American Rescue Team
International (ARTI),the world's most experienced rescue team.
The information in this article will save lives in an
earthquake.
I have crawled inside 875 collapsed
buildings, worked with rescue teams from 60 countries, founded
rescue teams in several countries, and I am a member of many
rescue teams from
many countries. I was the United Nations expert in Disaster
Mitigation (UNX051 -UNIENET) for two years. I have worked at
every major disaster in the world since 1985, except for
simultaneous disasters.
In 1996 we made a film which proved my
survival methodology to be correct. The Turkish Federal
Government, City of Istanbul, University of Istanbul, Case
Productions and ARTI cooperated to film this practical,
scientific test. We collapsed a school and a home with 20
mannequins inside. Ten mannequins did "duck and cover," and ten
mannequins I used in my "triangle of life" survival method.
After the simulated earthquake collapse we crawled through the
rubble and entered the building to film and document the
results. The film, in which I practiced my survival techniques
under directly observable, scientific conditions, relevant to
building collapse, showed there would have been zero percent
survival for those doing duck and cover.
There would likely have been 100 percent
survivability for people using my method of the"triangle of
life." This film has been seen by millions of viewers on
television in Turkey and the rest of Europe, and it was seen in
the USA, Canada and Latin America on the TV program Real TV.
The first building I ever crawled inside
of was a school in Mexico City during the 1985 earthquake. Every
child was under their desk. Every child was crushed to the
thickness of
their bones. They could have survived by lying down next to
their desks in the aisles. It was obscene, unnecessary and I
wondered why the children were not in the aisles. I didn't at
the time know that the children were told to hide under
something.
Simply stated, when buildings collapse,
the weight of the ceilings falling upon the objects or furniture
inside crushes these objects, leaving a space or void next to
them. This
space is what I call the" triangle of life". The larger the
object, the stronger, the less it will compact. The less the
object compacts, the larger the void, the greater the
probability that the person who is using this void for safety
will not be injured. The next time you watch collapsed
buildings, on television, count the "triangles" you see formed.
They are everywhere.
It is the most common shape, you will see,
in a collapsed building. They are everywhere. I trained the Fire
Department of Trujillo (population 750,000) in how to survive,
take care of their families, and to rescue others in
earthquakes.
The chief of rescue in the Trujillo Fire
Department is a professor at Trujillo University. He accompanied
me everywhere. He gave personal testimony:
"My name is Roberto Rosales. I am Chief of
Rescue in Trujillo. When I was 11 years old, I was trapped
inside of a collapsed building. My entrapment occurred during
the earthquake of 1972 that killed 70,000 people. I survived in
the "triangle of life" that existed next to my brother's
motorcycle. My friends who got under the bed and under desks
were crushed to death [he gives more details, names, addresses
etc.]...I am the living example of the "triangle of life". My
dead friends are the example of "duck and cover".
TIPS DOUG COPP PROVIDES:
1) Everyone who simply "ducks and
covers" WHEN BUILDINGS COLLAPSE is crushed to death -- Every
time, without exception. People who get under objects, like
desks or cars, are always crushed.
2) Cats, dogs and babies all naturally
often curl up in the fetal position. You should too in an
earthquake. It is a natural safety/survival instinct. You can
survive in a smaller void. Get next to an object, next to a
sofa, next to a large bulky object that will compress slightly
but leave a void next to it.
3) Wooden buildings are the safest type
of construction to be in during an earthquake. The reason is
simple: the wood is flexible and moves with the force of the
earthquake. If the wooden building does collapse, large survival
voids are created. Also, the wooden building has less
concentrated, crushing weight. Brick buildings will break into
individual bricks. Bricks will cause many injuries but less
squashed bodies than concrete slabs.
4) If you are in bed during the night
and an earthquake occurs, simply roll off the bed. A safe void
will exist around the bed. Hotels can achieve a much greater
survival rate in earthquakes, simply by posting a sign on
the back of the door of every room, telling occupants to lie
down on the floor, next to the bottom of the bed during an
earthquake.
5) If an earthquake happens while you
are watching television and you cannot easily escape by getting
out the door or window, then lie down and curl up in the fetal
position next to a sofa, or large chair.
6) Everybody who gets under a doorway
when buildings collapse is killed. How? If you stand under a
doorway and the doorjamb falls forward or backward you will be
crushed by the ceiling above. If the door jam falls sideways you
will be cut in half by the doorway. In either case, you will be
killed!
7) Never go to the stairs. The stairs
have a different "moment of frequency" (they swing separately
from the main part of the building).The stairs and remainder of
the building continuously bump into each other until structural
failure of the stairs takes place.
The people who get on stairs before
they fail are chopped up by the stair treads. They are horribly
mutilated. Even if the building doesn't collapse, stay away from
the stairs.
The stairs are a likely part of the building to be damaged. Even
if the stairs are not collapsed by the earthquake, they may
collapse later when overloaded by screaming, fleeing people.
They should always be checked for safety, even when the rest of
the building is not damaged.
8) Get Near the Outer Walls Of
Buildings Or Outside Of Them If Possible - It is much better to
be near the outside of the building rather than the interior.
The farther inside you are from the outside perimeter of the
building the greater the probability that your escape route will
be blocked;
9) People inside of their vehicles are
crushed when the road above falls in an earthquake and crushes
their vehicles; which is exactly what happened with the slabs
between the decks of the Nimitz Freeway. The victims of the San
Francisco earthquake all stayed inside of their vehicles. They
were all killed.
They could have easily survived by
getting out and sitting or lying next to their vehicles, says
the author. Everyone killed would have survived if they had been
able to get out of their cars and sit or lie next to them. All
the crushed cars had voids 3 feet high next to them, except for
the cars that had columns fall directly across them.
10) I discovered, while crawling inside
of collapsed newspaper offices and other offices with a lot of
paper, that paper does not compact. Large voids are found
surrounding stacks of paper.