A Brief History of Multi-Vehicle Collisions | Historical Documentary | Fascinating Horror

  • 2 weeks ago
"On the 15th of September, 2011, near Sao Paulo in Brazil one of the largest ever traffic accidents in history took place..."

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Transcript
00:00On the 15th of September, 2011, near Sao Paulo in Brazil, one of the largest-ever
00:17traffic accidents in history took place. In heavy fog several vehicles collided,
00:24beginning a chain reaction that ultimately consumed around 300 cars and trucks.
00:31The incident left one person dead and many more injured. While notable for its sheer scale,
00:39this pile-up is just one of many such multi-vehicle collisions,
00:44many of which have, at their root, the same basic cause.
00:49While the accident in Brazil was the largest in terms of the number of vehicles involved,
00:54it was by no means the deadliest pile-up ever to take place. A collision which occurred on the 29th
01:01of November, 1990, on the other hand, had a death toll of 17 persons, despite involving just 104
01:10vehicles. The main cause was a dust storm which descended on the I-5 north of Coalinga, California,
01:21reducing visibility to near zero and causing a chain reaction sequence of collisions on both
01:26the north and southbound carriageways. More than 100 vehicles smashed into five distinct masses
01:34of wreckage. Some drivers were lucky. On the periphery of a crash site they suffered nothing
01:42more than a fender bender and were able to jump from their vehicles and escape the roadway.
01:48Others, caught up in the middle of the mass, were impacted from all sides, hit over and over again
01:55until escape from their vehicle was impossible. The main cause of death, however, was not impact.
02:03Even in 1990 cars were built to offer as much impact protection as possible for their occupants,
02:10and so most victims survived the initial crash. It was the fire which burned through the wreckage
02:16afterwards that resulted in such a high death toll, with many vehicles burned down to their
02:22bare frames and two victims burned beyond recognition. The dust storm remained in place
02:30during the rescue operation. As fire and ambulance personnel tried to make their way out
02:36to the crash site they were involved in minor collisions of their own. With so many people
02:42injured in the incident rescuers were forced to requisition buses to transport them all to hospital.
02:51Similarly, a multi-car pileup in Germany, which took place on the 8th of April 2011,
02:58claimed eight lives, mainly due to a fire which followed the initial crash. The incident took
03:05place on the Autobahn 19 near Rostock, where a freak sandstorm reduced visibility to zero
03:13with almost no warning for drivers. The sandstorm was later blamed on drought conditions which had
03:21existed for the last few weeks, combined with recently plowed fields adjacent to the road
03:27and extremely high winds. For everyone involved in the crash it was a weather condition they had
03:34never encountered before. Survivors described a black wall of sand that enveloped them without
03:42warning, and a road surface made unexpectedly slick by huge amounts of sand and grit.
03:50A truck carrying hazardous materials was involved in the crash, and its cargo ignited, creating a
03:57fire which burned 20 vehicles. Again, the inability to see complicated everything,
04:04preventing rescue helicopters from landing and making it difficult for rescuers to communicate
04:10or to locate those still trapped in their vehicles.
04:15This inability to see what is going on around them is, for many survivors, one of the most
04:21terrifying aspects of these accidents. Many describe the experience of sitting in their
04:27vehicles hearing impact after impact nearby, unable to see far enough to determine if they
04:34are about to be hit again or if it is safe to try and escape their vehicle and run to the side of
04:39the road. Despite the destruction of multi-vehicle collisions, high death counts are rare. Most
04:48crashes of this kind result in a massive number of injuries but relatively few deaths. Where there
04:55is no fire collisions involving hundreds of vehicles may only result in a relatively small
05:01number of deaths. Many people experience a very lucky escape. This was the case during a pile-up
05:09which took place on the 5th of September 2013 in the UK. In this incident more than 130 vehicles
05:18collided within the space of just a few minutes. One very fortunate driver, a man named Martin
05:26Stammers, was unable to stop in time to avoid the pile-up altogether but managed to steer his
05:33vehicle through a small gap between the wreckage and the central reservation. When he came to a
05:39stop all he could hear for almost 10 minutes was the continual smash and crash of cars on the road
05:46behind him impacting the wreckage. Risking their lives, Stammers and his son exited their vehicle,
05:53skirted the wreckage, and ran back up the central reservation to warn approaching drivers of the
05:59crash. Again, fog was the cause. The area where the crash took place had very poor visibility
06:08due to thick fog, and yet many drivers reportedly entered the fog without switching on lights
06:14and without significantly reducing their speed. Some witnesses reported being passed by cars
06:21traveling at motorway speeds just before the crash, despite visibility that extended no further
06:28than nine meters or around 30 feet. A pile-up involving more than 130 vehicles was the inevitable
06:37result. Fortunately, however, though there were extensive injuries and hundreds of thousands of
06:45pounds worth of damage nobody died in this particular incident. Each of these massive
06:53multi-vehicle collisions was caused by the same basic mechanism... a sudden change in weather
07:00conditions dramatically reduced visibility. This change of conditions takes many forms
07:07in different accidents. On the 27th of February, 2014, south of Barrie, Ontario, a 105 vehicle
07:17pile-up was caused by a snowstorm. On the 2nd of December, 1994, intense glare from the sun
07:26on a rain-wet road caused a 127 vehicle pile-up. And on the 9th of January, 2008, fog and the smoke
07:36from a nearby chemical fire mixed to create zero visibility conditions on Interstate 4 in Florida,
07:43resulting in a 70 vehicle pile-up. Where roads are prone to foggy or dusty conditions it is
07:51possible to impose speed limits, improved lighting, and warning signs to give drivers a chance to
07:57adjust, but also often these accidents are down to freak weather conditions that cannot be reasonably
08:04predicted. This leaves only one line of defense against mass vehicle collisions... the behavior
08:12of drivers. Most countries in the world have some variation on a rule of the road which states,
08:19essentially, that drivers should drive according to conditions. In the UK, for example, drivers are
08:27instructed to leave a minimum two-second gap between themselves and the car in front, and to
08:33only ever drive at a speed that will allow them to stop within the distance they can see. The problem
08:40is, of course, that these rules generally aren't followed. Drivers tailgate. They drive at speeds
08:49higher than conditions allow in order to keep up with traffic, to get where they're going faster,
08:55or simply because they underestimate the time it will take them to stop if they need to. These are
09:01all behaviors which aren't really a problem until something happens... and they very suddenly are.
09:19you

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