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To: zaxtres
Any commercial passenger airplane entering densely wooded areas at flight speed would very likely lose it's wings and they would not be adjacent to their design position with respect to the wreckage of the fuselage.

It is also very likely that the empennage and rear fuselage would separate behind the wing roots and trail the main wreckage in the debris path.

We are all going to see what we want to see in that poor resolution photo. You know how I feel.

57 posted on 10/15/2018 12:16:50 PM PDT by pfflier
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To: pfflier

You said the plane was intact.

I was responding that ot wasn’t.

Now you are saying something totally different. Which is it?

The picture does not show an intact plan nor does it shw attached wings or an attached tail section. The plane is abnormally short. Anyone around planes will tell you that.

As far as the wings go, plenty f jungle crashes in which the wings sheared but were within distance of the fuselage. Stop watching movies and you might get a clearer perspective.


67 posted on 10/16/2018 8:12:43 AM PDT by zaxtres
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To: pfflier

Also, something you seemed to have missed is that the wings that appear near the fuselage are not full size. They are too short for the aircraft.

Since the entire scene is not in the picture then one can be sure where the rest of the plane is. However, looking to the left appears to be grayish white images as well. Leading to the belief that there are other parts of the plane on the way to the final resting place.

Again I don’t say this is the specific plane in question but appears to be a plane that has crashed.


68 posted on 10/16/2018 8:17:21 AM PDT by zaxtres
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