TWA Flight 800
Flight that exploded and crashed in 1996 off the coast of New York From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Trans World Airlines Flight 800 (TWA 800) was a scheduled flight from John F. Kennedy International Airport to Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport on July 17, 1996.[1] The aircraft was a Boeing 747-100 carrying 212 passengers and 18 crew members.[2] The plane exploded just 12 minutes after takeoff, tore apart and crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near East Moriches, New York.[1] There were no survivors.[3] The cause was determined to be a spark that ignited the center wing fuel tank. It remains the third-deadliest aviation accident in U.S. history.[4] It is one of the deadliest aviation accidents in Boeing 747 in history.
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Passengers and Crew
Most of the 230 occupants on-board were from the United States, but 42 more came from France, 10 from Argentina, and 60 more from sixteen other countries.
The pilots on board TWA Flight 800 were Captain Ralph G. Kevorkian, Co-pilot Steven E. Snyder and Flight Engineer Richard G. Campbell. All had more than 30 years employment with Trans World Airlines. There was also a Flight Engineer Trainee on board Oliver Krick, who was starting the sixth leg of his initial operating experience training.
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References
Other websites
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