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On 26 January 1950, the Douglas C-54 Skymaster serial number 42-72469 disappeared en route from Alaska to Montana, with 44 people aboard. [1] [2] The aircraft made its last radio contact two hours into its eight-hour flight.
Federal investigators are searching for a missing piece of an Alaska Airlines aircraft’s fuselage that blew off as they investigate what led to the horrifying midair ordeal that has resulted in ...
Amelia Earhart's missing modified Lockheed Model 10 Electra Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 is officially the flight with the most missing people (239 missing), although remains of the plane have been found in the Indian Ocean. This list of missing aircraft includes aircraft that have disappeared and whose locations are unknown.
Alaska Airlines also announced their inspections had found loose bolts on "many" aircraft. [ 53 ] [ 54 ] On January 9, Boeing's president and CEO, Dave Calhoun acknowledged the company's mistake in a company-wide meeting on safety and transparency following this accident.
Aug. 28—A search was underway Monday for a plane missing north of the Gulf of Alaska, authorities say. The Alaska State Troopers said they were notified around noon Sunday of an overdue ...
An investigation found that door panel on Alaska Airlines flight 1282 was missing key bolts Wiprud said she recalls looking down the aisle of the plane and seeing rows of passengers stare back at ...
This is a list of previously missing aircraft that disappeared in flight for reasons that were initially never definitely determined. The status of "previously missing" is a grey area, as there is a lack of sourcing on both the amount of debris that needs to be recovered, as well as the amount of time it takes after the crash for the aircraft to be recovered while searching, to fit this ...
The 1952 Mount Gannett C-124 crash was an accident in which a Douglas C-124 Globemaster II military transport aircraft of the United States Air Force crashed into Mount Gannett, a peak in the Chugach Mountains in the American state of Alaska, on November 22, 1952.