WRECK CONFIRMED AS FOSSETT PLANE!
The wreckage of a plane found near the town of Mammoth Lakes in California does belong to missing US adventurer Steve Fossett, officials say.
A number plate confirmed the plane as the single-engine Bellanca Super Decathlon owned by the 63-year-old millionaire businessman.
The search began after a hiker found items thought to belong to Mr Fossett.
He vanished in September last year on a solo flight that took off 90 miles (145km) away in neighbouring Nevada.
Click here to see a map of the area
A wide-ranging search operation conducted since then had failed to find any trace of Mr Fossett or his plane and he was legally declared dead by a court in Chicago in February.
Authorities said there would now be an extensive search for human remains by about 50 people and five dog teams.
The National Transportation Safety Board will be responsible for examining the wreckage.
Identity documents bearing Mr Fossett's name - including a pilot's licence - as well as cash and a sweatshirt were found by hiker Preston Morrow on Monday.
He had been returning from a mountain walk when he spotted the items in dirt and pine needles west of Mammoth Lakes.
A number plate confirmed the plane as the single-engine Bellanca Super Decathlon owned by the 63-year-old millionaire businessman.
The search began after a hiker found items thought to belong to Mr Fossett.
He vanished in September last year on a solo flight that took off 90 miles (145km) away in neighbouring Nevada.
Click here to see a map of the area
A wide-ranging search operation conducted since then had failed to find any trace of Mr Fossett or his plane and he was legally declared dead by a court in Chicago in February.
Authorities said there would now be an extensive search for human remains by about 50 people and five dog teams.
The National Transportation Safety Board will be responsible for examining the wreckage.
Identity documents bearing Mr Fossett's name - including a pilot's licence - as well as cash and a sweatshirt were found by hiker Preston Morrow on Monday.
He had been returning from a mountain walk when he spotted the items in dirt and pine needles west of Mammoth Lakes.
SOME OF FOSSETT'S RECORDS
1998/2002: Long-distance for solo ballooning
2001/2002: Duration for solo ballooning
2002: First solo round-the-world balloon flight
First balloon crossings of Asia, Africa, Europe, South America, South Atlantic, South Pacific, Indian Oceans
Seven fastest speed sailing titles
13 World Sailing Speed Record Council titles
2001: Fastest transatlantic sailing
2004: Fastest round-the-world sailing
Round-the-world titles for medium airplanes
US transcontinental titles for non-military aircraft
An employee at a sporting goods store, Mr Morrow said he handed them over to police after unsuccessful attempts to contact the Fossett family.
The BBC's Rajesh Mirchandani, in Los Angeles, says the items were found outside the vast area searched after Mr Fossett went missing - and also in a different direction to that in which he was thought to have flown.
Mammoth Lakes has an elevation of about 7,800ft (2,400m) and is on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada range.
Teams led by the Madera County Sheriff's Department began a search of the area following Mr Morrow's discovery.
Erica Stuart, a spokeswoman for the department, said what looked like plane wreckage had been spotted late on Wednesday night.
On Thursday morning, the National Transportation Safety Board said wreckage had been found about 10,000ft (3,200m) up the Sierra Nevada mountains.
However, Mammoth Lakes' community liaison officer, Stuart Brown, told the BBC severe weather could hamper the ongoing investigation.
"We've got six to 12 inches of snow coming in Friday night, Saturday, with high winds - our first big storm of the season - so we'll just have to see how that affects the search," he said.
Mr Fossett took off from the ranch of hotel magnate Barron Hilton, at Yerington, Nevada, on 3 September 2007 on a flight that was expected to last three hours.
In 2002, he became the first person to circle the globe solo in a balloon and had about 100 other world records to his name.
BBC NEWS REPORT.
Labels: Fossett Plane Mammoth-Lakes U.S. Adventurer Nevada Solo-flight
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home