By Wednesday morning, crash debris began washing ashore at the marina. Fleegle said there was something that looked like a rib bone amid pieces of seats, small chunks of melted plastic and checks
Explain how the wind blew this stuff into the lake. Also, you do not need to see a video of the smoke from the crash. The still photo shows the smoke going straight up. If there was a breeze the direction of the smoke would not be going straight up.
The FBI backed the finding of the Flight 800 investigation saying it was a fuel tank problem. They discounted all the eyewitness reports and did not even investigate them.
On your planet does the wind blow constantly all day long?
I have seen no reports that indicate anything pulled from the lake was anything more substantial than paper and scraps of nylon. Whether something that "looked like a rib bone" was actually a human rib bone from Flight 93, or a remnant from Uncle Jed's BBQ three days before is impossible to say. Regardless, unless you care to refute all the evidence including radar tapes that clearly show Flight 93 never flew over Indian Lake, you are going to have to provide some explaination for how debris (a single piece of burned check stub) from the Flight 93 was able to float down as far as 8 miles away from the crashsite. By all accounts, the aircraft was very low, and heading southeast just before it crashed. It was witnessed by people in Lambertsville and Stoysville just prior to its impact. Both those towns are northwest of the crash site. So somehow, a very fast, very low flying aircraft that hit the ground 2.5 miles shy of Indian Lake was able to scatter debris into that lake. What is your theory about how the debris got there?
Finally, the only photo of the fireball I am aware of, was taken from Indian Lake. That is directly downwind from the crashsite. Let's say for the sake of arguement that a single photo of the smoke from the fireball could give you an indication of wind velocity and direction. If you were downwind of that smoke, the smoke would be blowing directly at you and would show no wind driven bias to the left or right of your photo.