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3 Air Crashes in a Day!

TeeKee

Alfrescian
Loyal
7 kids among 14 people killed in Mont. plane crash

By MATT GOURAS, Associated Press Writer
10 mins ago
BUTTE, Mont. – A small plane carrying a group of people from California to Montana crashed into a cemetery not far from the airport in Butte and burst into flames, killing seven adults and seven children.
"There was nothing left of it," said Steve Guidoni of Butte, who watched the crash Sunday. "It just went straight into the ground. I went over there to try to help. I thought maybe I would pull someone out of the fire."
Guidoni said he saw luggage and seat cushions lying around, but no bodies. He said the biggest piece of the plane was the size of a kitchen table.
"You wouldn't even know a plane was there," he said.
The death toll was confirmed by Karen Byrd, a Federal Aviation Administration operations officer in Renton, Wash. Earlier, the count had been put as high as 17.
The single engine turboprop crashed and burned at Holy Cross Cemetery, 500 feet short of Bert Mooney Airport in Butte, said FAA spokesman Mike Fergus.
The plane was believed to be taking its occupants on a ski trip to Montana. "We think that it was probably a ski trip for the kids," Fergus said.
An investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board offered few details at a press conference in Butte Sunday night. No cause of the crash was given.
"We are just beginning our investigation," said Kristi Dunks. "We don't have a lot of information at this time.
"Certain family members were contacted," she said. "At this point, I don't have an exact number."
A California newspaper, the Napa Valley Register, reported on its Web site late Sunday that a family of five from St. Helena, Calif., including three preschoolers, was among the victims.
Dunks would not say if there had been a distress call from the pilot. It was partly cloudy, the visibility was 10 miles and winds were blowing from the northwest around 10 mph at the time of the crash, according to hourly temperature information from the National Weather Service.
The aircraft had departed from Oroville, Calif., and the pilot had filed a flight plan showing a destination of Bozeman, about 85 miles southeast of Butte. But the pilot canceled his flight plan at some point and headed for Butte, Fergus said.
Butte Silver-Bow Sheriff John Walsh said there were a few people at the cemetery at the time of the crash, but no one on the ground was injured.
Nick Dipasquale, 19, was working at a gas station across the street. "I heard a loud bang," he said. "It sounded like someone ran into the building."
He said he ran outside to see flames as tall as the trees.
Dipasquale said people who were fueling their cars said they saw the plane flying low, begin a turn, start to wobble and then slam into the ground.
Fergus said the Pilatus PC-12 aircraft was manufactured in 2001.
The Pilatus PC-12 is a single-engine turboprop aircraft designed and manufactured by Pilatus Aircraft of Switzerland. It is certified for 12 persons on board and typically seats 6-9 passengers plus 1-2 pilots. The PC-12 has a range of 1,750-2,600 miles and cruises at approximately 300 miles per hour, according to Flight Aware, a Web site that tracks air traffic.
The plane was registered to Eagle Cap Leasing Inc. in Enterprise, Ore., Fergus said. He didn't know who was operating the plane.
I. Felkamp is listed in Oregon corporate records as Eagle Cap's president. Attempts to reach him by phone were unsuccessful.
In Switzerland, Markus Kaelin, executive assistant to the chairman of Pilatus Aircraft, said the company had no comment.
The flight originated at Brown Field Municipal airport in San Diego on Saturday evening and flew to Redlands, Calif., about 100 miles north, said Rachel Laing, a spokeswoman for the city of San Diego.
The plane left Sunday morning for Vacaville, Calif., according to Flight Aware. From there it flew to Oroville, Calif., and then to Butte.
"We are still gathering the information of the aircraft, it's purpose, what they were doing and where they were going," Dunks said.
In Oroville, Calif., Tom Hagler said he saw a group of about a dozen children and four adults Sunday morning at the Oroville Municipal Airport, about 70 miles north of Sacramento.
Hagler, owner of Table Mountain Aviation, described the children as ranging from about 6- to 10 year olds. He let the children into his building to use the restroom.
"There were a lot of kids in the group," he said. "A lot of really cute kids."
Hagler said he showed the pilot where he could fuel his plane, and the pilot said he expected his flight to take two-and-a-half hours. The pilot didn't file a flight plan at the Oroville airport.
It was the worst plane crash in America since a commuter plane last month fell on a house in a suburb of Buffalo, N.Y., killing all 49 passengers and a man in the home.
Before the Buffalo crash there hadn't been an accident involving a commercial airliner in the U.S. in which there were fatalities in more than two years.
___
Associated Press writers Tom Verdin in Oroville, Calif.; Mike Blood in Los Angeles; and Elliot Spagat in San Diego contributed to this report.
 

TeeKee

Alfrescian
Loyal
Ukrainian plane skids off runway in Istanbul

1 hr 23 mins ago
ANKARA, Turkey – A Ukrainian plane with 44 passengers and crew on board skidded off the runway after landing at Istanbul's Ataturk airport on Monday, reports said. No one was injured.
Television footage showed the Embraer ERJ145 of the Dniproavia aviation company leaning on its nose several meters (yards) from the runway.
All 44 passengers and crew were evacuated safely, the state-run Anatolia news agency said.
The private Dogan news agency said the plane's front landing gear was stuck in m&d.
The cause of the accident was under investigation.
 

TeeKee

Alfrescian
Loyal
Past accidents involving MD-11 jets

By The Associated Press
1 hr 1 min ago
TOKYO – An MD-11 aircraft operated by FedEx crashed Monday at Tokyo's main international airport, killing its two-member crew. Though largely retired from passenger use for economic reasons, the MD-11 aircraft was involved in several accidents in the late 1990s:
• August 1999: A China Airlines MD-11 passenger jet flipped over and burst into flames, killing three people and injuring more than 200 after landing in a storm in Hong Kong.
• April 1999: A Korean Air cargo MD-11 jet crashed in Shanghai, China, slamming into a construction site and makeshift housing for migrant workers, killing nine people, including five on the ground.
_September 1998: A Swissair airliner flying from New York to Geneva crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off Canada, killing all 229 people aboard. The pilot reported smoke in the cockpit and attempted an emergency landing at Halifax International Airport.
• July 1997: A FedEx cargo plane landed hard, flipping over on its back and snapping off a wing as it skidded down the runway in a fireball at Newark, N.J. All five people aboard crawled to safety out a cockpit window.
_June 1997: A Japan Air Lines MD-11 had severe pitching during its final approach to Nagoya, central Japan, injuring 12 people, four of them seriously.
 

tun_dr_m

Alfrescian
Loyal
& Mother Earth Farted 5 times in a day too!

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090323/ap_on_re_us/alaska_volcano

Alaska volcano Mount Redoubt erupts 5 times


By MARY PEMBERTON, Associated Press Writer Mary Pemberton, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 5 mins ag

WILLOW, Alaska – Alaska's Mount Redoubt volcano erupted five times overnight, sending an ash plume more than 9 miles into the air in the volcano's first emissions in nearly 20 years. Residents in the state's largest city were spared from falling ash, though fine gray dust fell Monday morning on small communities north of Anchorage.

"It's coming down," Rita Jackson, 56, said Monday morning at a 24-hour grocery store in Willow, about 50 miles north of Anchorage. She slid her fingers across the hood of her car, through a dusting of ash.

Ash from Alaska's volcanos is like a rock fragment with jagged edges and has been used as an industrial abrasive. It can injure skin, eyes and breathing passages. The young, the elderly and people with respiratory problems are especially susceptible to ash-related health problems. Ash can also cause damage engines in planes, cars and other vehicles.

Alaska Airlines on Monday canceled 19 flights because of the ash. In-state carrier Era Aviation canceled four, and Elmendorf Air Force Base in Anchorage kept 60 planes, including fighter jets, cargo aircraft and a 747 commercial plane, in shelters.

Five of 20 Alaska state senators were scheduled on the morning flight from Anchorage to Juneau, which was canceled. As a result, consideration of a resolution accepting federal stimulus funds was put off until Wednesday.

The first eruption, in a sparsely populated area across Cook Inlet from the Kenai Peninsula, occurred at 10:38 p.m. Sunday and the fifth happened at 4:30 a.m. Monday, according to the Alaska Volcano Observatory.

The wind took the ash cloud away from Anchorage, toward Willow and Talkeetna, near Mount McKinley, North America's largest mountain.

There were reports of a quarter-inch of ash in Trapper Creek and up to a half-inch at a lakeside lodge near Skwentna.

Dave Stricklan, a hydrometeorogical technician with the National Weather Service, expected very fine ash.

"Just kind of a light dusting," he said. He said the significant amount of ash probably dropped immediately, right down the side of the volcano.

"The heavier stuff drops out very quickly, and then the other stuff filters out. There's going to be a very fine amount of it that's going to be suspended in the atmosphere for quite some time," he said. "The finer ash is going to travel farther, and any ash can affect aviation safety."

Jackson said she was taking a sip of coffee when she tasted something funny on her lips — ash. She was experiencing other affects, too.

"My eyes are itching really bad," she said as she hurried to get out of the store and to her car.

Jackson, who unexpectedly got the day off, hurried home from the grocery store to secure a motorcycle, snowmachine and vehicles under protective blue tarps.

The 10,200-foot Redoubt Volcano, roughly 100 miles southwest of Anchorage, last erupted during a four-month period from 1989-90.

In its last eruption, Redoubt sent ash 150 miles away into the path of a KLM jet and its four engines flamed out. The jet dropped more than 2 miles before the crew was able to restart all engines and land safely. The plane required $80 million in repairs.

The volcano became restless earlier this year. The observatory had warned in late January that an eruption could occur at any time.

Increased earthquake activity over the past 48 hours prompted scientists to raise the alert level for Mount Redoubt on Sunday.

On Sunday morning, 40 to 50 earthquakes were being recorded every hour.

A steam plume rising about 1,000 feet above the mountain peak was observed Saturday.

Three seismometers on the mountain were damaged in the eruption but seven others remained in place, said observatory geophysicist John Power.

The observatory planned a helicopter flight to the mountain Monday afternoon to sample ash, repair equipment and monitor flooding along the Drift River, which flows from a glacier of the same name.

Power said the history of past eruptions of Redoubt indicate the volcano could erupt again in the next few days or weeks.

"It's something we need to stay prepared for," he said.

___

Associated Press Writers Dan Joling and Mark Thiessen in Anchorage contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Alaska Volcano Observatory: http://www.avo.alaska.edu
 

singveld

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
just a bit of force broke the fuel tank in the wing and burn immediately, wow, i was not expecting the crash in narita at all.
 

Cestbon

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
All airline now are cutting cost have no money to do maintenance. When economy good have money buy no time to waste to do maintenance because have too many passenger/schedule to meet. So many plane are long time overdue to do maintenance.
Many more crash will make headline.
 
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