Audio By Carbonatix
A young girl has been saved from the rubble of a block of flats in southern Turkey, more than a week after the devastating earthquake struck.
Miray had been trapped in the ruins for 178 hours - seven-and-a-half days.
Video showed workers cheering and shouting "God is great" as she was lifted out of the darkness.
Several others were saved on Monday, including a 13-year-old boy trapped for 182 hours. But rescues are becoming rarer as the death toll passes 35,000.
This is partly due to limits on how long the human body can survive without water.
Other factors include how much space the trapped person has to breathe and how bad their injuries are, an emergency medicine specialist told the BBC.
Prof Tony Redmond also said the cold temperatures in Turkey and Syria were a double-edged sword.
If you are very cold, your blood vessels shrink and you can last a little longer from your injuries, he explained. But getting too cold is harmful in itself.
The death toll in Turkey and neighbouring Syria is expected to rise dramatically, with the United Nations' humanitarian chief warning it could double.
Miray - the young girl rescued on Monday in the city of Adiyaman - was attached to a stretcher and carried away by rescue workers. Local media reported teams on the ground were hoping to find her older sister.
In hard-hit Hatay province, 13-year-old Kaan was rescued after being trapped for 182 hours - as well as a woman called Naide Umay, found alive after 175 hours.
In the city of Kahramanmaras, rescue workers had made contact with a grandmother, mother and baby - all stuck, but alive - and were working to reach them.
Thousands of teams across the region - including coal miners and experts using thermal cameras and sniffer dogs - have been scouring the remains of collapsed buildings to find remaining survivors.
But hopes of finding people alive are dwindling and there is a sense that the rescue mission will soon end.
The focus is shifting to recovery, with officials looking at shelter, food and healthcare.
Questions are also being raised about whether the natural disaster's impact was made worse by human failings.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has admitted shortcomings in the response, but during one visit to a disaster zone last week, he appeared to blame fate.
Officials say they have issued 113 arrest warrants in connection with the construction of buildings that collapsed, with 12 people taken into custody, including contractors.
Latest Stories
-
Kareweh criticises govts for policies that look good but achieve little in agriculture
2 minutes -
Galamsey is killing our cocoa, our water, our future – Minority warns of food security meltdown
4 minutes -
Keta is drowning, not fishing – Minority demands urgent fix to premix fuel breakdown
18 minutes -
Rising attacks on journalists demand better coordination with Security agencies — MFWA
27 minutes -
A nation that left its farmers behind – Minority blasts gov’t over GH¢5bn grain disaster
34 minutes -
Move to scrap OSP is premature, Inusah Fuseini tells Majority caucus
34 minutes -
Farmers’ day losing meaning without real reform — GAWU Warns
36 minutes -
GTA boss outlines three priorities to drive Volta Region’s tourism growth
36 minutes -
Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, actor who performed in ‘Mortal Kombat,’ dies at 75
38 minutes -
Ghana celebrates 41st Farmers’ Day, spotlighting champions of food security
43 minutes -
Recreation Minister Kofi Adams backs ‘Walk With Lexis’ set for December 6
1 hour -
Milo U13 Championship reaches quarter-final with thrilling match-ups
2 hours -
From glut to growth – John Dumelo says value addition is the way forward
3 hours -
Feed Ghana, feed industry – Deputy Agric Minister Dumelo outlines new direction
4 hours -
Agric glut was political, not strategic – Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana boss warns of lost livelihoods
4 hours
