Dogs, drones and sound detectors: How rescuers search for quake survivors
Rescuers continue searching for survivors in La Guaira, Venezuela, following twin earthquakes that killed at least 1,450 people. Teams are employing methods such as search dogs, sound detection devices, and thermal imaging cameras to locate any remaining victims. The 96-hour optimal rescue window has passed, but efforts persist as hope remains among the rescuers.
Take it further — get the full app and never miss a moment of what's happening in Australia.
This publisher's site can't be shown here due to their security settings.
Open full article →No source link available for this article.
Published 29 Jun 2026, 17:35 UTC · Updated 29 Jun 2026, 18:50 UTC
Summary by OZbrief Editorial. Original report: BBC News – World. Editorial policy · Corrections
Trending
- Breaking: Australian arrested after teenage girl's body found in Thailand
- Court returns proceeds of house sale seized from convicted paedophile
- David Hencke, journalist who exposed 'cash for questions' scandal, dies at 79
- Former CFMEU chief pleads for drug trafficker tied to Big Build corruption
- Paul Hogan has reportedly called Pauline Hanson a ‘pelican’. Please explain?
- Abigail Velez apologizes for controversial comment about Bosnia during broadcast



