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American
scientists rescued by search team
By
Andres Cala
Associated Press
SANTO
DOMINGO, Dominican Republic Two American scientists lost
in a mountainous park for a week were rescued by a Dominican search
team and were recuperating Thursday from exhaustion, officials said.
Patrick
Martin and Olivia Duren got lost Feb. 21 in Armando Bermudez National
Park, site of Pico Duarte, the highest mountain in the Caribbean
at nearly 10,500 feet.
They
survived by rationing two days worth of food supplies and drinking
spring water until a rescue team found them Wednesday afternoon.
Martin
and his assistant Duren, both from Cornell University, were researching
a rare pine tree, Pino occidentalis, which grows in parts of the
Dominican Republic. Fog and fatigue made them lose their trail,
said Radhames Lora Salcedo, director of the countrys emergency
agency.
When
found, the scientists had not eaten for two days and were suffering
from fatigue, diarrhea and minor scratches, Lora said.
The
two were recovering at a scientific field office in Jarabacoa, 94
miles northwest of the capital, Santo Domingo. There is no phone
at their quarters.
Martin,
who has conducted his field work in Pico Duarte for the last three
years and knows the area well, was equipped with camping gear and
global positioning equipment.
They
fell into a natural trap, like a deep valley surrounded by mountains,
and could not return to their path, said Lora.
Scientists
from Cornell, in Ithaca, N.Y., have been researching the park since
January and are expected to return in mid-March.
More
than 60 people and a helicopter participated in the rescue efforts.
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