CHESTER TOWNSHIP — People at the scene of a crash between two shuttle buses that killed a 2-year-old girl Oct. 2 rushed to help the child and others who were injured, multiple callers told 911 dispatchers.

Authorities have released recordings of six 911 calls made after the crash at Alstede Farms, a busy spot where town officials have said traffic is often overwhelming in the fall.

A male caller calmly tells a dispatcher there are four pedestrians struck, children and adults alike, one with a possible broken leg. That caller and others tell dispatchers CPR was in progress. It's not clear in the calls who's performing the CPR.

Not all the callers say they are able to see the crash themselves. Some are calm, others sound more panicked. Some are being fed information by others in the crowd while on the line with 911. There are various accounts of how many people were hit.

Excerpts from the released 911 tapes:

"There's a bunch of people yelling and saying a girl got hit by a car up ahead," one female caller says in the recordings." She described the vehicles involved as a "van, and a van behind the other van."

"An ambulance needs to come," she continued. "It's bad."

In one recording, a dispatcher struggles to get a female caller to answer questions. Instead, all that can be heard are the noises of the crowd — including frantic screams of "Oh my God."

Yet another caller mistakenly fells a dispatcher just two adults are hit, and neither is pinned. She's corrected by someone nearby, and tells the dispatcher: "There's a little girl. There's a child. She was bleeding. ... They're doing chest compressions on her."

In most of the recordings, dispatchers let callers know they're receiving multiple reports, and ambulances are on the way.

Authorities edited the tapes to omit personal information provided by the callers.

The Morris County Prosecutor's Office has also not yet provided a seventh recording, saying in response to a public records request that the recording "pertains to eyewitness information in this ongoing investigation." The office said the release of the recording would jeopardize its investigation.

The prosecutor's office has said the county medical examiner determined 2-year-old Elizabeth "Ella" Fuehring's death was caused by blunt trauma to the head. The death has been listed as an accident, Morris County Prosecutor Frederic Knapp said in a news release earlier this month.

The other individuals struck and pinned between the vehicles, Sarah Fuehring, Elizabeth's mother, and Joanna Alemany, suffered serious but not life-threatening injuries, authorities said.

During an interview with NJ Advance Media, Joanna Alemany said she shattered her pelvis and Sarah Fuehring broke her femur, and both were sent to Morristown Medical Center for surgery.

Louis C. Hochman may be reached at lhochman@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @LouisCHochman. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

— Kimberly Redmond contributed to this report