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News Source: NewKerala
| 5 months ago
Two separate trails of bodies and debris more than 50 miles apart suggested a high-altitude break-up of the Rio-to-Paris flight on June 1, in which passengers would have died instantly. The first official report on flight AF447's crash ruled that out,...
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News Source: Al Sharq Al Awsat
| 5 months ago
A submarine scouring the Indian Ocean on Sunday picked up the signal beacons of the two black boxes of a Yemenia Airways flight that crashed off the Comoros Islands, the French aviation agency said. A 12-year-old girl, Bahia Bakari, is the only...
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News Source: Uinta County News
| 5 months ago
An inquiry into the Air France crash in which 228 people died has failed to find the cause of the disaster. The plane did not break up in mid-air and life vests found among the wreckage were not inflated, indicating the crew had not prepared...
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News Source: NewKerala
| 5 months ago
The Telegraph quoted investigators as saying that the Airbus "descended vertically" and dropped 35,000 feet in a matter of seconds, hitting the water in its exact flying position. The details of the last moments of Flight AF 447 from Rio de Janeiro...
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News Source: The Times of India-Europe-World
| 5 months ago
Air France Flight 447 slammed into the Atlantic Ocean, intact and belly first, at such a high speed that the 228 people aboard probably had no time to even inflate their life jackets, French investigators have said in their first report into the June...
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News Source: Press TV
| 5 months ago
The French investigating body in charge of aviation security mishaps, BEA, has in its latest account revealed that passengers of the ill-fated flight had no time to react in the face of a sudden sharp descent that plunged the airliner into the ocean.
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News Source: Minneapolis Star Tribune
| 5 months ago
The Air France Airbus A330 that crashed into the Atlantic on June 1, killing all 228 people aboard, did not break up in the air but rather hit the water intact, on its belly, French investigators said Thursday. But investigators acknowledged that...
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News Source: The Scotsman
| 5 months ago
Air France jet that plunged 35,000ft into the Atlantic Ocean last month, killing all 228 people on board, five of them British...There were no traces of fire or explosives on the 640 pieces of debris from the aircraft recovered so far from the ocean...