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1 Dead, More Than 60 Injured in Train-Truck Collision in W.Va. (UPDATE: Injuries Revised Down to 23; Truck Driver Lone Fatality)

Train...was taking passengers on a scenic tour amid changing fall foliage.

Story by the Associated Press; curated by Dave Urbanski

UPDATE: Authorities say the driver of a loaded log truck that collided with a train carrying 63 passengers and four crewmembers on a West Virginia sightseeing trip is the lone fatality in an accident that hurt 23 others.

UPDATE: A preliminary toll of more than 60 injured initially reported by authorities following the accident was revised downward by a hospital official, Tracy Fath. She told The Associated Press Friday evening that dozens brought to a hospital by bus were found unhurt though an official earlier reported they had lesser injuries.

Original story below.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A logging truck collided Friday with a train that was taking passengers on a scenic tour amid changing fall foliage in eastern West Virginia, killing one person and injuring more than 60 others, emergency services officials said.

The cause of the accident between the truck and the Durbin & Greenbrier Railroad train on a trip at the peak of the fall season wasn't immediately known.

Two passenger cars overturned in the accident at 1:30 p.m. Friday along U.S. Route 250 about 160 miles east of Charleston near Cheat Mountain, said emergency services director Shawn Dunbrack of Pocahontas County.

Randolph County emergency services director Jim Wise said at least three people were critically hurt. He said 21 people were taken to a hospital in Elkins by ambulances and 45 others with lesser injuries were transported there by bus. There were no immediate details on the death and nature of the injuries.

Hospital spokeswoman Tracy Fath said at least eight ambulances arrived at the hospital. She didn't immediately know the patients' conditions. Medical personnel also were tending to those on the bus.

"Some wished to have medical care. Some declined to have medical care," Fath said. "Our staff is on the bus trying to [assess] which ones will want to be seen."

Dunbrack said the train involved was operated by the Durbin & Greenbrier Railroad. The railroad's Cheat Mountain Salamander runs Tuesdays through Saturdays in October on a 6.5-hour trip. The railroad said there were three passenger cars Friday on the 88-mile roundtrip that left Elkins on a route taking passengers to elevations of more than 4,000 feet.

This is breaking news; updates will be added.

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