Defense Department forensic scientists retrieved bone fragments, personal effects, and survival equipment from a military aircraft crash site discovered earlier this month by a National Guard helicopter crew on Colony Glacier in Alaska, announced Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command officials. JPAC investigators think the wreckage is that of an Air Force C-124A transport that crashed en route from McChord AFB, Wash., to Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, on Nov. 22, 1952, reported the Associated Press on June 28 (via the New York Daily News). All 52 personnel aboard the aircraft—41 passengers and 11 crew—perished in that accident, according to AP. The eight-person JPAC team, which arrived on the glacier on June 18, intended to scout the area for a follow-on recovery effort. However, due to deteriorating weather and glacier conditions, the team ended up recovering as much evidence as possible, states a June 26 JPAC release. The collected material is going to a JPAC personnel identification lab, states the release.
Members of the Air Force Reserve’s 920th Rescue Wing helped save 11 airplane crash survivors off the coast of Florida on May 12. The Reserve Airmen were flying an HC-130J Combat King II and an HH-60W Jolly Green II on a routine training flight when a Coast Guard call diverted…