9 June 2014
Last updated at 12:48 ET
Some 200 people are involved in the operation, near Berchtesgaden in southern Germany.
The first rescuers reached the man in the vertical cave on Monday.
A second group, including an Austrian doctor used to cave rescues, descended some hours later, Bavarian public TV said. Another team from Switzerland was also reported to be on its way.
The man, who was with two companions on a Whitsun-holiday trip
in the Untersberg mountain range, suffered injuries to his head and
torso in the rock fall in the early hours of Sunday. Although he was
wearing headgear, it was unable to protect him from the weight of the
rock.
"He is responsive but he's not doing well," an official told Sueddeutsche Zeitung.
The man was one of the researchers who discovered the cave a few years ago, German media report.
While one of his companions went to seek help, the other stayed
with him. He is said to be from the Stuttgart area although authorities
have not released his name.
The entrance was found in 1995, but it is only in the past dozen years that explorers have begun investigating the cave system, which is said to be full of ravines and vertical shafts.
The complex nature of the cave system, as well as its depth, is making the operation even more hazardous, officials say.
"We have shafts that go straight down 350m (1,150 ft), where you have to abseil down and climb back up on a rope," Klemens Reindl told German TV.
Bavaria's Riesending caves
A team from Switzerland was due to join the operation and an Italian team was also on standby
The initial aim was for alpine experts to set up a base station
at a depth of 300m and then establish communications with the rescue
team.
Stefan Schneider from Bavaria's mountain rescue said bringing up the injured climber would be even harder than reaching him had been: "You have to imagine it's 1,000m almost vertically, where you have to climb up with ropes and crampons."
Very few specialists were equipped to deal with such depths, he added.
Some 200 people were involved in the rescue operation near Berchtesgaden
The cave is said to have a labyrinth of ravines and vertical shafts
Germany's deepest cave rescue drama near Berchtesgaden
TO SEE VIDEOS;
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-27759819
The BBC's Mariko Oi says it could be days before the trapped man sees daylight
A
team is trying to rescue a 52-year-old man injured in a rock fall in a
1,000m-deep (3,280ft) cave in Germany, in an operation that could take
days.
The Riesending cave is Germany's deepest and it took one of
the man's companions up to 12 hours to return to the surface to raise
the alarm.Some 200 people are involved in the operation, near Berchtesgaden in southern Germany.
The first rescuers reached the man in the vertical cave on Monday.
A second group, including an Austrian doctor used to cave rescues, descended some hours later, Bavarian public TV said. Another team from Switzerland was also reported to be on its way.
Stefan Schneider, Bavarian Mountain Rescue Service, explains the challenges
"He is responsive but he's not doing well," an official told Sueddeutsche Zeitung.
The man was one of the researchers who discovered the cave a few years ago, German media report.
The entrance was found in 1995, but it is only in the past dozen years that explorers have begun investigating the cave system, which is said to be full of ravines and vertical shafts.
The complex nature of the cave system, as well as its depth, is making the operation even more hazardous, officials say.
"We have shafts that go straight down 350m (1,150 ft), where you have to abseil down and climb back up on a rope," Klemens Reindl told German TV.
- Deepest and longest cave system in Germany - 19,2km long and 1,148m deep
- Narrow tunnels reached only by abseiling down 300m
- Lies on Austrian border, north of Berchtesgaden
- Injured researcher reportedly helped discover caves in 1995
- Mapping of cave system began in 2002
Stefan Schneider from Bavaria's mountain rescue said bringing up the injured climber would be even harder than reaching him had been: "You have to imagine it's 1,000m almost vertically, where you have to climb up with ropes and crampons."
Very few specialists were equipped to deal with such depths, he added.
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