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The crash site of the DC-3 was featured in the music video of Justin Bieber's 2015 song I'll Show You. [9] American musician George Hirsch's 2016 album Hijrah used an image of the Sólheimasandur crash as its cover. [10] The show Top Gear America featured in the episode "Viking Trucks" while in Iceland. [citation needed]
This Austin Airways plane written off in an accident at Val-d'Or Airport, Quebec. [19] July 3, 1970: Douglas C-47 N154R 7: Reeder Flying Service plane crashed on take-off from McGrath Airport, Alaska on a domestic passenger flight to Galena Airport, Alaska. Seven of the 27 people on board were killed. [20] July 6, 1970: Douglas VC-47 T.3–43 —
The accident is the deadliest air accident in Iceland [1] [6] and the second deadliest involving an Icelandic aircraft, after the crash of Icelandic Airlines Flight 001 in Sri Lanka in 1978. [7] In 1997, fifty years after the accident, the Súlur Kiwanis Club of Ólafsfjörður erected a memorial below the crash site in the form of a two-metre ...
Plane forced to abort landing at DC airport the day before deadly collision. Just one day before the deadly crash, a passenger jet had to abort its initial landing at Reagan National Airport after ...
1951 Glitfaxi plane crash; 1973 Sólheimasandur Douglas DC-3 crash; 1975 Kjalarnes helicopter crash; 1979 Mosfellsheiði air crashes; 1986 Eagle Air Piper PA-23 crash; 2000 Skerjafjörður plane crash
Watch live as recovery efforts continue in the Potomac River on Monday, 3 February, after the Washington DC plane crash, in which an American Airlines jet and a US Army Black Hawk helicopter ...
Victims named as Adina Azarian, 49, her two-year-old daughter Aria, pilot Jeff Hefner, and nanny Evadnie Smith
The 1951 Flugfélag Íslands DC-3 crash (Icelandic: Glitfaxaslysið, "the Glitfaxi accident") was a plane crash that occurred on 31 January 1951 when a Douglas DC-3 from Flugfélag Íslands, christened Glitfaxi, crashed in Faxaflói in Iceland, killing all 20 people aboard.