China mine disaster death toll rises to at least 19, after 'rock burst' reported

In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, a worker is carried on a stretcher out of the Longyun coal mine in Yuncheng County, east China's Shandong Province, Sunday, Oct. 21, 2018. ((Guo Xulei/Xinhua via AP))

The death toll from a coal mine collapse in eastern China has spiked to at least 19 after the bodies of six additional miners were found, state media reported Monday.

Rescuers found one body on Sunday morning and five additional bodies later in the day, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

The accident at the Longyun Coal Mining Co. Ltd mine, located about 360 miles south of Beijing, took place on Oct. 20. The miners were believed to be located about 250 feet before the surface when coal fell at both ends of the roughly 240-foot long shaft due to a "rock burst."

As of early Monday, state media reported that workers cleared roughly 180 feet of the shaft and were searching for the last two miners who remained trapped.

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More than 300 people were inside the mine at the time of the collapse.

In this photo taken Oct. 21, 2018 and released by Xinhua News Agency, rescuers walk out of the site of a coal mine where falling rocks killed miners and trapped some in Yuncheng County in eastern China's Shandong Province. (Guo Xulei/Xinhua via AP)

"Rock burst accidents are often caused by fractures in rocks due to mining," Xinhua reported.

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China long had the world's deadliest coal mines but safety has improved considerably with more modern equipment, better training and the closure of most of the smallest, most dangerous mines. China is by far the world's biggest consumer of coal.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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