World's most shocking industrial accidents.

Those are pretty shocking, all. But how about the Nedelin catastrophe? Bad stuff, man.

It doesn’t seem anybody mentioned the recent molten steel incident in China, but I would say that’s pretty terrifying.

I reckon this counts as an industrial disaster:

Aberfan

In addition to the aforementioned 8 atm differential, the situation was that D4 was sucked through a small hatch propelled by the volume of air within the decompression system. If his body blocked the hatch, it could well have created a pressure wave (fluid hammer) that increased the pressure on his body by considerably more than 8 atm. These effects are what ripped his body apart, not the decompression per se.

A similar fluid hammer effect is theorised for the Aloha Airlines flight 243 incident. The plane suffered a decompression incident due to galvanic corrosion, but a huge area of the plane blew out. The theory is that a small hole (10"x10") constrained by anti-rip material was blocked by the body of a stewardess, creating a fluid hammer that tore the plane almost in half and blew out a row of seats.

I am interested in the theory that the fats in the blood vessels were caused by boiling…

The temperature of the blood did not change - just the pressure (although it may have “boiled” loosing water and dissolved gas content) - so how did the lipoproteins denature at body temperature? Remember that water boiled at altitude is cooler than 100C due to the lower pressure.

Si

And then, we get into sweet & sticky nightmares.

Not large scale by any means, but still… one of the most horrific ways I can imagine to die:

Several years ago at a Tyson chicken factory in Knetucky (near me), a man slipped and fell into a gian vat of chicken guts and went under. A friend tried to rescue him. They both drowned in chicken guts. >shudder<

One I actually WITNESSED… I was working in a factory that made ping pong tables, among other gaming equipment, and they had… ah hem… less than admirable safety conditions.

One night we heard a blood-curdling scream… a woman from the next department came staggering toward us, and it took a moment for it to register exactly what I was seeing. It looked like her face was… melting.

She had been working over a fast moving conveyer belt, and the company had removed the safety guard so she could get in closer to it. She had her long hair tied back in a ponytail, but as she leaned over, it fell forward, over her shoulder, and was caught in the belt.

It literally scalped her, ripping the skin off her skull. The reason it looked like her face was melting… there was nothing to hold it up. The forman sent another worker back to dig hair and scalp out of the conveyer, and he carried it past us in a plastic bag, dripping with blood. She was life-flighted to Louisville, but they were unable to reattach her scalp. I didn’t work there much longer (Wonder why???) so I never heard what happened to her. I have often wondered…

I know somebody whose father in law went under an engaged mower. Luckily no pictures or crappy media attention occurred. The mower went over the whole body.

My uncle was in a coal dust explosion. I don’t know how he lived through that. He had almost all his skin burned. That story was in a national magazine when it occurred. He was married for a couple years, young and a outdoor sportsman. He found out his wife was pregnant after he become coherent again months later. They had the new baby in the house before the anniversary of the accident. I don’t know how you care for a new born and a burn victim at the same time. He was covered in bandages for years and had surgeries for years. You never forget the people that are screaming, when they are not unconscious. Think of having your raw skin brushed to remove the dead stuff.

I know somebody that fell over a work barrier for an elevator shaft while on a ladder. He just missed landing on bolts that stuck up out of the floor of the concrete. They put him back together over six months. He’s truly fucked up. Did you know OSHA doesn’t investigate the work site unless two people are injured? He didn’t have needed evidence, because he didn’t start finding this out until six months later after getting out of the hospital.

How do you qualify the worst industrial disasters?
By the number of injured?
By the cost of care after the injury?
By the number of dollars they won’t earn during their life?
By the pain and emotional trauma inflicted during their life because of the accident?
By the amount of lost product for the company?
By the lost capital of the company?
By the lost lives of people that died because they didn’t have the product?

I don’t think it’s possible to say a certain industrial accident is the worst one to ever happen. It covers too much for such a small question.

But the question is which is the most shocking - not necessarily the worst in terms of casualties, cost or destruction of property etc. I think it’s more about which ones were the most horrific in what they did to the people involved.

I ran into that diving bell thing in Wikipedia a few months ago and it’s stuck in my head nastily ever since - I’d say that’s definitely in the running for “most shocking”. The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire seems sort of sanitized by history, but I’ve read some first person accounts by people in the street hearing the women jumping go “SCREAM…THUMP” that kind of bring back the horror of the thing.

For me one of the most personally shocking industrial accidents was the USS Iwo Jima steam line rupture. I was active duty at the time, and had never been particularly comfortable with the steam plant I was working in, anyways. Having those ten sailors killed, not because of anything they did, by being cooked alive, was the stuff of nightmares.
Similarly when I got out of the Navy and came to Rochester there was an accident at a local large-scale freezer plant: A forklift operator drove a loaded forklift over a section of flooring which covered one of the major supply pipes for the ammonia refrigeration system. The flooring and piping collapsed while the forklift was traveling over it. And everyone involved with the clean up could only hope that the poor guy died instantly - because the combination of caustic and temperature effects from the concentrated ammonia was that horrific. Certainly no one tried to rescue the guy.

I think this one rates right up there: 1947 Texas City Disaster

“Mother was able to account for all our family except my father, Warren Marshall Barger, and Sheila’s dad, Joe Smith Alford. Uncle Dick Barger and I searched every aid station, clinic, hospital and morgue looking for them, hoping for a miracle. Mr. Alford was seen in the Marine Hospital. He was facing the Grandcamp and was blown through a Quonset hut and lost a leg. He spent many years trying to forget the event before he died. My father was the Light Oils Dept. supervisor at Republic. He and the rest of management were on the docks trying to get the ship moved from port - they had a Barrel House operation there. Dad was walking up the gangplank of the Grandcamp.
About six weeks after the blast, a portion of his body involving a leg, part of his torso and neck was found, indentified by dental records, and hair matched with hair from one of his many hats. This part of him was interred in the family burial plot. If other parts were ever found, they are buried at the memorial park for the unidentified dead.”

My dad’s family has been in the Galveston/Texas City/La Marque area for something like 150 years, and my mom grew up in Galveston.

It’s still kind of shocking to hear people tell stories about “the 1900 storm”- it’s really kind of a neat thing in terms of how stories get passed down through generations.

And as to the Texas City Disaster, it’s kind of strange- the county cemetary has a BIG section where the dead were buried. It was a shock the first time my grandmother was telling me about all the various people in the cemetery and sort of waved a hand and said “That area over there is where they buried the people killed in the Texas City Disaster. They had to buy a pasture to hold 'em all.”

My dad mentioned that growing up in that area, it was not at all uncommon to see people around his age (63) with scars on their heads and faces- apparently in those days, people put their babies’ cribs near the windows, and the blast blew all the windows in for miles, putting cuts on the babies. (he was in Galveston, far enough away to not have the windows blow out)

The OP’s link contains a further link to the first one that came to mind for me: Piper Alpha. By sheer coincidence, I was doing safety training for some new hires today and was using that as an example of failure of work permitting practices.

Great choice for the poor schlubs who survived the initial explosion and fire: burn to death on the platform, or freeze to death in the sea.

And on a lighter side, there is the Bricklayer Story. Although this source cites it as a song, I first heard it told by a state commissioner of labor at an industrial safety training session:

Shocking, certainly - but it wouldn’t appear to qualify as industrial.

Train wrecks are always nasty as paddle wheeler and steam tramp boiler explosions. Mine explosions, tunnel excavation accidents, and lumber harvesting and milling accidents have always been gruesome.

Sydenham, Sydney
Five people died and 748 were injured when two passenger trains collided.

There was the time the Department of the Interior accidently burnt down large areas of the town of Los Alamos NM.

I don’t think anyone was killed in that one but many people lost their homes.

Can someone explain this in not-so-technical language? I don’t really get what happened because I can’t visualize the chamber and the bells, nor can i figure out why they or the men were there. Were they underwater, these chambers?

I shouldn’t read threads like this in the middle of the night right before I’m about to go to sleep. I’ll have great dreams tonight, for sure. :eek::o:(

I missed the edit window before I realized I wasn’t explaining myself very well. Why would opening that door result in such a drop (rise?) in air pressure? Where were the men who opened the door? Were they underwater? I’m so confused.