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An Italian cheese maker died this week after thousands of cheese wheels fell and crushed him in his warehouse. 

Giacomo Chiapparini, 74, was checking over his stock Sunday night when a shelf buckled, dropping as many as 15,000 wheels of cheese on him in an avalanche. Each wheel weighed as much as 84 pounds, the BBC reported. 

Firefighters responded after neighbors reported a sound "like thunder" from the warehouse. The search for Chiapparini took 12 hours before authorities located his body. 

The firefighters told the AFP that they determined Chiapparini used a machine to rotate and clean the cheese wheels, which may have disturbed the shelf. An investigation will determine the full story of how the collapse occurred, but a local official believed the machine must have malfunctioned.

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Italian cheesemaker Giacomo Chiapparini

Giacomo Chiapparini, 74, died following a shelf collapse in his warehouse that dumped thousands of cheese wheels on him. (Zuma Press)

The Chiapparini warehouse in Lombardy contained 25,000 wheels of Grana Padano, a hard cheese similar to Parmesan. The economic damage totaled around $7.7 million in losses. 

As if the loss of the family patriarch was not enough to grapple with, the family has to race to preserve what they can of their remaining stock. 

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cheese stacked high on shelves in warehouse

Men work in an aging warehouse of Parmesan and Grana Padano in Fiorenzuola d'Arda (Piacenza Province), Italy, on Jan. 1, 2012. (Massimo Di Nonno/Getty Images)

The cheese wheels have to remain in a climate-controlled warehouse, and the summer weather is enough to spoil the remaining supply if they are not moved quick enough. 

"The family, his wife Angela and two children, cannot understand what happened," Bortolo Ghislotti, president of the local agricultural district, told Italian outlet Il Giorno. "But now we are looking for some colleague willing to keep all the wheels… which otherwise would have to be thrown out."

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workers in cheese warehouse

Men work in an aging warehouse of Parmesan and Grana Padano in Fiorenzuola d'Arda (Piacenza Province), Italy, on Jan. 1, 2012. (Massimo Di Nonno/Getty Images)

Ghislotti compared the damage to what happened to "the king of cheeses" following an earthquake in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy in 2012. The earthquake damaged the warehouses of the Parmigiano-Reggiano consortium, which held 360,000 wheels of cheese costing over $200 million.

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Chiappriani had helped out the consortium at that time, taking 10,000 of the wheels to conserve them and limit the already catastrophic losses. 

The Chiappriani family has produced their Grana Padano cheese since 2006, the New York Post reported. A neighbor told reporters that Chiappriani himself worked night and day to help support his family, including his wife, children and grandchildren, who have survived him.