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Victims may have died before crash( Passengers frozen solid! )
CNN ^
| 08/15/2005
| CNN
Posted on 08/15/2005 8:47:22 AM PDT by devane617
ATHENS, Greece (CNN) -- Investigators were working to determine why a Cypriot plane apparently suffered a catastrophic loss of cabin pressure and slammed into a Greek mountain -- possibly with all 121 people on board already dead. All but two of the bodies have been recovered, a Greek government spokesman said Monday, and officials hope autopsies and cockpit recorders will hold clues to Sunday's crash of Helios Airways Flight 522. The autopsies were ordered to determine if the 115 passengers and six crew were already dead or oxygen-starved before the crash, the spokesman said. A Greek Defense Ministry source with access to the investigation told Reuters that most of the bodies recovered were "frozen solid."
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: air; aircraft; airplane; boeing737; heliosairways; terror; terrorist; travel
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To: CHICAGOFARMER
Were they at 30,000 ft? I thought a short haul flight would be flying a lot lower, say at around 15,000. If so, wouldn't that have bought them a little more time?
41
posted on
08/15/2005 9:04:06 AM PDT
by
mewzilla
(Property must be secured or liberty cannot exist. John Adams)
To: hombre_sincero
A cell phone call MINUTES before the crash has been "re-interpreted" from "I am frozen" (as in fear or other) How about "I am frozen" to mean esactly that. He was frozen.
42
posted on
08/15/2005 9:04:56 AM PDT
by
It's me
To: hoosiermama
It be cold up there. A failure in the environmental systems, and you've got man-cicles.
43
posted on
08/15/2005 9:05:31 AM PDT
by
Pukin Dog
(Sans Reproache)
To: Rudder
That's cold enough.
-30F is about as low as it goes in SEWisconsin during January. Calls for multiple layers of clothing not to mention vigilance about leaning exposed skin in the breeze.
44
posted on
08/15/2005 9:05:53 AM PDT
by
ninenot
(Minister of Membership, Tomas Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
To: It's me
Sounds to me like the passengers air supply worked... and the air supply to the pilots didn't work. And the passengers rode around in the cold until their air ran out, or until they died due to the cold.
45
posted on
08/15/2005 9:06:49 AM PDT
by
kjam22
To: mewzilla
At 35,000 according to the
BBC.
46
posted on
08/15/2005 9:07:22 AM PDT
by
Heatseeker
("I sort of like liberals now. They’re kind of cute when they’re shivering and afraid." - Ann Coulter)
To: cripplecreek
Nope, we only let them load luggage and maintain American planes....at USAF bases.
Not to mention nuke plants.
47
posted on
08/15/2005 9:07:54 AM PDT
by
ninenot
(Minister of Membership, Tomas Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
To: mewzilla
UR# 41 ...i agree....
....there 'is' something not being told here.....
?...british T.V. cameras in the cockpit of all commercial planes?
/OFF....'friendly-bombers'
48
posted on
08/15/2005 9:08:15 AM PDT
by
maestro
To: kjam22
If that is the case, and they were aware the pilots were dead, that must have been horrendous death.
To: wildwood
"but didn't you notice a number of false information tidbits right from the beginning, before they even knew what had happened? " Yes I agree my comments are not based on that initial misinformation
"apparently the plane went around and around for 20 minutes without communication, according to a report today. "
Not so much "around and around" as carried on it's pre configured flight path due to the autopilot.
The F16 pilots that "buzzed" the airliner reported seeing passengers moving in the cabin on their first pass. They saw clearly the pilot slumped over the controls while passengers where seen moving around in the passenger compartments.
It is also possible the passengers caused the crash of the airliner by attempting to gain manual control.
Too soon to tell the recovery and crash analysis has not even got under way yet.
It is very strange and suggests the cabin crew succumbed prior to the passengers.
To: Heatseeker
1. 0900 [0700GMT]: Helios Airways Flight ZU522 leaves Larnaca bound for Prague via Athens
2. 0920 approx: Plane reaches cruising altitude of 35,000ft
3. 0937: Plane enters Greek airspace
4. 1007: Air traffic control unable to contact aircraft
5. 1030: Greek ATC issues "Renegade alert"
6. 1055: F16 fighter aircraft scramble
7. 1120: F16s intercept aircraft; pilots observed slumped over controls
8. 1205: Aircraft crashes near Grammatiko, 40km north of Athens
51
posted on
08/15/2005 9:09:20 AM PDT
by
KarlInOhio
(Bork should have had Kennedy's USSC seat and Kelo v. New London would have gone the other way.)
To: wildwood
I know that modifications on the 727 were made years ago after that guy bailed out in Washington (was it?). Can you bail out of a 737 of any model?
52
posted on
08/15/2005 9:09:35 AM PDT
by
neodad
(I wish to have no connection with any ship that does not sail fast, for I intend to go in harm's way)
To: devane617
That's what I think happened..... but no one had a long enough oxygen cable to go fly the plane to a lower altitude.
53
posted on
08/15/2005 9:10:09 AM PDT
by
kjam22
To: devane617
Being an Environmental System Specialis/technician in Air Force. The Temperatures at 30,000 feet are below zero. If cabin pressure is lost in flight, oxygen loss (hypoxia) will cause the passengers to pass out. loss of the AC/heating will cause them to ..well... freeze at altitude.
The AC System actually pressurizes the aircraft.
54
posted on
08/15/2005 9:10:24 AM PDT
by
Zavien Doombringer
(Have you gotten your Viking Kittie Patch today? http://www.visualops.com/patch.html)
To: Heatseeker
Thanks! I'm no pilot, but isn't that a little high for a short haul?
55
posted on
08/15/2005 9:10:58 AM PDT
by
mewzilla
(Property must be secured or liberty cannot exist. John Adams)
To: pabianice
56
posted on
08/15/2005 9:11:04 AM PDT
by
Paradox
(Budweiser, fighting for the Right to Keep and Beer Arms.)
To: devane617
57
posted on
08/15/2005 9:11:07 AM PDT
by
Dallas59
(“You love life, while we love death.” - Al-Qaeda / Democratic Party)
To: devane617
-50F air being blown in for an hour....
58
posted on
08/15/2005 9:12:04 AM PDT
by
finnman69
(cum puella incedit minore medio corpore sub quo manifestus globus, inflammare animos)
To: r9etb
Yeah, but even at -30 it takes a living, warm body a long time to convert into "frozen solid." I don't think the plane was airborne long enough for that. Add wind chill? LOTS of wind chill!
59
posted on
08/15/2005 9:12:45 AM PDT
by
null and void
(Be vewwy vewwy qwiet, we're hunting wahabbits...)
To: Boundless
Based on the shortness of the flight (1 hr), I don't think it can. Per an AP report posted on this thread http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1463039/posts?q=1&&page=201 (post 258), the plane was in the air over 3 hours before the crash. Have a source for the 1 hour?
Communication was lost about 2 hours before the crash.
60
posted on
08/15/2005 9:12:54 AM PDT
by
PAR35
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