Mina Rosita Vieja disaster
{{Short description|1908 coal mine disaster in Mexico}}
The Mina Rosita Vieja disaster occurred on February 27, 1908, when a huge early-morning explosion rocked the Rosita Vieja Coal Mine near the town of San Juan de Sabinas, Coahuila.
The explosion led to the deaths of 200 miners in shaft No. 2. The blast just before six a.m. on the 27th, at the shift change, was thought to be caused by firedamp. Most of those killed were Japanese immigrant laborers.{{cite news|title=16 Bodies are Taken From Rosita Mine|url=https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth442357/m1/1/zoom/?resolution=3&lat=5684&lon=2532|accessdate=15 July 2016|publisher=San Antonio Daily Express|date=29 Feb 1908}}
This event remains the most deadly coal mine disaster in Mexican history, followed by the Mina de BarroterĂ¡n coal mine disaster of 1969.{{cite book|last1=Christopher G. Morris|first1=Cutler J. Cleveland|title=Handbook of Energy: Chronologies, Top Ten Lists, and Word Clouds|date=15 Nov 2013|publisher=Elsevier|pages=585|isbn=978-0-12-417019-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ScL77rOCZn0C&pg=PA585|accessdate=15 July 2016}}
References
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{{Portal|Mexico|Energy}}
{{Coord missing|Coahuila}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mina Rosita Vieja Disaster}}
Category:Coal mining disasters in Mexico
Category:1908 disasters in Mexico
Category:February 1908 in North America
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