An unidentified miner, left, is helped by an emergency worker after being rescued from the Cabeza de Negro gold-and-copper mine in Yauca del Rosario, Peru, Wednesday April 11, 2012. Nine miners had been trapped inside a wildcat mine since April 5. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)
An unidentified miner, left, is helped by an emergency worker after being rescued from the Cabeza de Negro gold-and-copper mine in Yauca del Rosario, Peru, Wednesday April 11, 2012. Nine miners had been trapped inside a wildcat mine since April 5. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)
A miner watches the rescue operation for nine fellow miners trapped inside the Cabeza de Negro gold-and-copper mine in Yauca del Rosario, Peru, Tuesday, April 10, 2012. Authorities say nine miners trapped inside the wildcat mine since April 5 are being supplied with sports drinks, soup and food while emergency responders work to free them. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)
Miner Jacinto Pariona, in orange hard hat and sunglasses at right, is helped after being the first miner to be rescued from the Cabeza de Negro gold-and-copper mine in Yauca del Rosario, Peru, Wednesday April 11, 2012. Nine miners have been trapped inside a wildcat mine since April 5. Peru's President Ollanta Humala stands bottom left. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)
Miner Jacinto Pariona, center right, stands with his family after he was the first miner to be rescued from the Cabeza de Negro gold-and-copper mine in Yauca del Rosario, Peru, Wednesday April 11, 2012. Nine miners had been trapped inside a wildcat mine since April 5. Peru's President Ollanta Humala stands bottom left. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)
A miner holds a bag of coca leaves for chewing as he waits during rescue operations for nine fellow miners trapped inside the Cabeza de Negro gold-and-copper mine in Yauca del Rosario, Peru, Tuesday April 10, 2012. Authorities say nine miners trapped inside the wildcat mine since April 5 are being supplied with sports drinks, soup and food while emergency responders work to free them. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)
ICA, Peru (AP) ? Nine Peruvian miners were rescued Wednesday after six days trapped in an abandoned copper mine.
The nine, ranging in age from 23 to 58, walked out without assistance about an hour after dawn from a reinforced tunnel that rescuers had built as they removed more than 26 feet (8 meters) of dirt and rock.
The miners wore sunglasses and were covered with blankets. President Ollanta Humala greeted them.
Humala had spent the night at the mine 150 miles (240 kilometers) southeast of Lima.
The miners were trapped by a cave-in triggered by an explosion they themselves had set.
They had communicated with rescuers through a hose, in place before the collapse, by which they also received food and medicine during their ordeal in a horizontal shaft dug into a mountainside.
"It's pretty ugly inside," one of the rescued men, Edwin Bellido, told RPP radio. "We slept on the ground on muddy plastic."
He said the miners kept their spirits up by telling each other jokes, singing and running in the 160-foot-long (50-meter) tunnel.
The Cabeza de Negro mine that they were working had been abandoned in the 1980s.
Humala said the incident points up the dangers of working such mines in Peru, in which tens of thousands are engaged. He said he had given instructions for Cabeza de Negro to be sealed definitively.
The rescue drew some comparisons to the 69-day ordeal of 33 Chilean miners trapped more than 2,000 feet (700 meters) underground in 2010 near the Chilean city of Copiapo.
The Peru rescue was not by any measure a comparable engineering feat because the miners were not similarly trapped deep beneath the earth. Neither heavy equipment nor drilling was required to extract them. Rescuers relied primarily on shovels, pick axes and wheelbarrows.
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