Body recovered from 2009 Air France flight
May 5th, 2011 - 8:03 pm ICT by BNO NewsPARIS (BNO NEWS) — Search teams were able to recover a body of one of the 228 victims that died during Air France flight 447, which crashed in the Atlantic Ocean in 2009 during a scheduled flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, French authorities said Thursday.
According to the statement, the body was found still strapped to one of the aircraft’s seats, but the condition of the body was described as ‘degraded,’ as it had remained at the bottom of the sea for almost two years. A DNA sample was retrieved to possibly identify the body.
On Tuesday, France’s Bureau of Enquiry and Analysis for Civil Aviation Safety (BEA) announced that an investigation team localized and identified the aircraft’s Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) Monday night, which was later lifted on Tuesday morning.
The recovery came just days after the memory unit of the flight data recorder (FDR) was located in the ocean last Sunday and appeared to be in good condition. The recoveries of the FDR, or black box, and the CVR could finally give investigators the information they need to figure out what caused the crash of flight 447, almost two years later after the incident.
Last week, a twelve-hour long search of the ocean floor near waypoint TASIL led to the discovery of the chassis of the plane’s FDR. But as the crash survivable memory unit was missing, it was of no use to investigators.
Initial investigations have stated that the accident could have been caused by malfunction of the airplane’s speed sensors (Pitot tubes), which would have resulted in inaccurate airspeed data. Others have also said the airline failed to respond quickly to the reports.
On June 1, 2009, an Airbus A330-200 jetliner operated by Air France as Flight 447 and on route from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to Paris, France crashed near waypoint TASIL in the Atlantic Ocean around three and a half hours after taking off. Five days after the crash, search and rescue teams recovered two bodies and floating debris from the aircraft. Only 51 bodies were recovered after the search was called off on June 27, 2009.
In early April, the aircraft’s wreckage was found during the fourth sea search, which was funded by Air France and Airbus. The recovery gave investigative teams renewed hope to understand the causes of the accident.
The crash marked Air France’s deadliest, and BEA chief Paul-Louis Arslanian called the incident the worst accident in French aviation history.
- Investigators find black box from crashed Air France flight - May 02, 2011
- Bodies found, no black box among 2009 Air France crash wreckage - Apr 05, 2011
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- Pilot training blamed for 2009 Air France crash - Jul 29, 2011
- Debris of 2009 Air France crash found - Apr 05, 2011
- Air France Rio crash: Jet plunged in minutes - May 27, 2011
- Air France crash plane not destroyed in flight: Official - Jul 02, 2009
- Air France AF447 black boxes NOT found - Jun 23, 2009
- Body of Air France pilot identified - Jun 25, 2009
- Mourning begins for Air France crash victims (Lead) - Jun 03, 2009
- Air France AF447 had terror suspects onboard - Jun 11, 2009
- Flight data recorder of crashed Air India flight found - May 25, 2010
- 24 bodies recovered from Air France crash - Jun 09, 2009
- Possible Air France AF447 2009 crash debris sighted - Jun 02, 2009
- Buddhist monks offer prayers for victims of Air France Flight 447 - Jun 04, 2009
Tags: air france, air france flight, airbus a330 200, airspeed, bno, civil aviation safety, cockpit voice recorder, de janeiro brazil, flight data recorder, french authorities, initial investigations, investigation team, jetliner, memory unit, pitot tubes, rio de janeiro brazil, search teams, speed sensors, tasil, tuesday morning