As bodies are recovered in Texas - those who have been inside the blast zone return stunned by the extent of the devastation.
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Helicopter pictures reveal the enormous damage caused by a fertiliser plant blast in West,
Texas, as the close-knit community pulls together. -
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Little remains of the factory.
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A giant hole in the ceiling of the West High School gym.
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The West Rest Haven Nursing Home, a block away from the factory,
was badly damaged by the explosion which left many dead and injured. -
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Volunteers gather donated bedding outside the West Community Centre.
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West High School senior students Brittany Singh, Kelsey Hoelscher and
Ashton Uptmor pray for victims and survivors. -
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Many in the town are struggling to come to terms with the scale of the disaster.
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Clean-up and repair efforts are under way in the surrounding area
Officials have recovered 14
bodies following a massive explosion that levelled a fertiliser plant
and destroyed dozens of homes in West, Texas.
Texas Department of Public Safety Sgt Jason Reyes did not say where the
bodies were found but said more information would be provided later.The majority of confirmed victims appear to have been firefighters or emergency workers who rushed in to fight the initial blaze.
Sgt Reyes earlier announced that 12 bodies had been recovered by Friday morning and that search and rescue efforts were ongoing.
Senator John Cornyn, speaking earlier to reporters in West, said as many as 60 people remain unaccounted for, but suggested some could be staying with friends and relatives.
Even before investigators released a confirmed number of fatalities, the names of the dead were becoming known in the town of 2,800.
Authorities said there is no indication that the blast was anything other than an industrial accident. It remains unclear what sparked the blaze.
"We know everyone that was there first, in the beginning," said Christina Rodarte, who has lived in West for 27 years. "There's no words for it.
"It is a small community, and everyone knows the first responders, because anytime there's anything going on, the fire department is right there - all volunteer."
West's landscape is likely to be altered permanently after an area four to five blocks in radius was levelled by the blast. An apartment complex was badly shattered, a school set ablaze, and a nursing home was left in ruins.
Residents have been kept out of a large swathe of West, where search and rescue teams continue to pick through the rubble.
Some with permission have made forays closer to the destruction and came back stunned - and it is possible other residents will be allowed to retrieve some personal belongings on Friday, emergency workers said.
Texas attorney general Greg Abbott said: "I had an expectation of what I would see, but what I saw went beyond my expectations in a bad way. It is very disturbing to see the site."
Firefighter Darryl Hall, from Thorndale, about 50 miles away from West, was one of the rescue workers helping with the house-to-house search.
A team from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives still had not been able to begin investigating the scene because it remained unsafe, agency spokeswoman Franceska Perot said.
The West Fertilizer Co facility stores and distributes anhydrous ammonia, a fertiliser that can be directly injected into soil, and a blender and mixer of other fertilisers.
Records reviewed by the AP news agency show the US Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration fined West Fertilizer $10,000 last summer for safety violations that included planning to transport anhydrous ammonia without a security plan.
An inspector also found the plant's ammonia tanks were not properly labelled.
In a risk-management plan filed with the Environmental Protection Agency about a year earlier, the company said it was not handling flammable materials and did not have sprinklers, water-deluge systems, blast walls, fire walls or other safety mechanisms in place at the plant.
State officials require all facilities that handle anhydrous ammonia to have sprinklers and other safety measures because it is a flammable substance, according to Mike Wilson, head of air permitting for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.
But inspectors would not necessarily check for such mechanisms, and it is not known whether they did when the West plant was last inspected in 2006, said Ramiro Garcia, head of enforcement and compliace
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