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SAN JOSE MINE, Chile -- Drillers neared the lower reaches of a gold and copper mine where 33 men have been trapped for more than two months, preparing Friday for a breakthrough that would unleash a national outpouring of joy.
Engineers had just the last 128 feet (39 meters) of rock to carve through, and were working carefully to keep the T130 drill from jamming or punching through with too much force, Mining Minister Laurence Golborne said.
"We are very close," Golborne said. "It would be very complicated if after all the work we have done ... you lose the hole. We have to be very careful and do it in a controlled way."
The breakthrough, to be heralded with a loud siren, was sure to be an emotional milestone in the tent city known as "Camp Hope."
"There's just a little bit left to go, a very little bit," said Cristina Nunez, anxious to see her husband, Claudio Yanez, and shivering in the bitter cold of the desert morning.
Anxiety was surging among some of the families who have held vigil since the day the mine collapsed. With their men trapped inside, wives, parents, siblings and children have been forced to improvise and deal with all manner of relationship issues. And each miner has had to choose which two or three close relatives can see them first in the mine's field hospital after they surface, creating hard feelings among those left out.
"Their nerves and tension are about to explode," said Chile's first lady, Cecilia Morel, who has more than 30 years' experience as a family counselor. She said she encouraged them to be patient and even use breathing exercises to stay calm, and she plans to stay nearby so she can keep counseling them in the next few days.
"My interest is to try to contribute and create an atmosphere that allows them to be more calm, to be more relaxed, to learn some things," she added.
If the shaft's rock walls are found to be strong, the miners could be pulled out beginning Tuesday. If not, rescuers will line the shaft at least partially with steel pipe, delaying the rescue for three to eight more days.
Nunez is among those who want rescuers to take no chances, and wait a few more days if necessary to pull them all out safely.
The T130 drill aimed at a workshop 2,047 feet (624 meters) below ground.
That's not as deep as where the miners happened to be gathered together, eating their midday meal, when 700,000 tons of rock collapsed August 5. The mine runs like a corkscrew for more than four miles (7 kilometers) below a rocky hill in Chile's vast northern Atacama desert, and at any other time, some would probably have been crushed in the middle section.