Talk:List of accidents and incidents on commercial aircraft/Holding zone

Holding zone edit

Note: this is a temporary holding area for list items that appear eligible for inclusion but are missing a corresponding article. Please maintain a chronological order and the same format as the main list. Please remove any item that is moved to the main list.

1928 edit

  • August 25 - A British Columbia Airways Ford 4-AT-B crashed into the sea near Port Townsed while flying in fog. Two crew, 5 passengers and one dog killed.

1935 edit

1938 edit

1946 edit

  • December 25 – One after the other, 3 aeroplanes crashed while attempting to land during a snowstorm at Shanghai airport in China; a total of 72 people perished in what became known as China's "Black Christmas".

1949 edit

1952 edit

  • May 26 – BOAC four-engined Handley Page Hermes IV G-ALDN crash-lands in the Sahara Desert with 10 passengers on board, 1,300 miles off-course on a flight between Tripoli and Kano. All passengers and crew survive the initial crash landing, but the First Officer later dies of injuries sustained in the crash.
  • October 5 - Skvoritsy mid-air collision: An Aeroflot Ilyushin Il-12 operating as Flight 376 was descending for Shosseynaya Airport when it collided with Aeroflot Flight 381, a Douglas TS-62 that was departing the same airport for Minsk, killing all 31 on board both aircraft.

1953 edit

  • Again, I didn't actually remove these Comets from the main page because they are historically prominent crashes with or without articles (in my opinion), but as far as I know they have no corresponding articles. plmoknijb 00:47, 18 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

1954 edit

  • March 1 - Darbhanga Aviations Douglas DC-3 aircraft (Registration - VT-DEM) crashed near Calcutta after No.1 engine of the DC-3 caught fire immediately after takeoff from Calcutta runway 19R. The aircraft failed to gain height, stalled and crashed into trees, 3330 feet past the runway end. 2 of the 8 passengers, and all 3 crew members aboard the DC3 were killed in the crash.

1955 edit

  • January 19 – United Air Lines Flight 329, a two-engine Convair experiencing mechanical failure made an emergency landing on its belly near Dexter, Iowa. The aircraft skidded across frozen fields for more than one-half mile and the fuselage broke open. All 36 passengers and 3 crewmembers survived.

1965 edit

1968 edit

  • August 10 – Piedmont Airlines Flight 230, a Fairchild Hiller 227B N712U "The James River Pacemaker" crashed on landing at Charleston, WV, killing 31 immediately and 4 more dying over the next few days. Ultimately, there were 2 survivors. Cause was pilot error CFIT in fog.

1969 edit

1975 edit

1979 edit

1980 edit

1984 edit

  • August 5 – an Aeroflot Antonov An-12 flew into a hailstorm over Nawabshah, Pakistan which damaged its engines. The plane broke up during a steep descent, killing all 24 passengers and crew.

1988 edit

1989 edit

1995 edit

  • March 5 - Palair Macedonian Fokker 100 PH-KXL crashed seconds after takeoff from Skopje runway 34 on a flight to Zurich. Investigation into the accident determined the cause of the accident to be the failure to deice the aircraft before departure. Of the 97 people on board, 83 died.
  • September 9 – A SATENA CASA C.212 Aviocar crashes during an attempted landing near La Macarena, Colombia killing 21 of the 22 people on board.

1996 edit

1997 edit

1998 edit

2000 edit

  • August 12 – A Staer Air Antonov An-26 crashes near Tshikapa, Democratic Republic of the Congo during an attempted landing. All 21 passengers and six crew members are killed.
  • October 6 – Aeroméxico Flight 250, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, misses the runway while landing at Reynosa, Mexico during bad weather. All of the 88 people on board survived, but four people on the ground were killed when the aircraft crashed into homes and vehicles.
  • October 31 – An Aca-Ancargo Antonov An-26 explodes in flight near Monaquimbundo, Angola. UNITA rebels claim to have shot it down. All 44 people on board died.
  • November 20 – An American Airlines Airbus A300 takes off from Miami, Florida and goes back and lands after the cabin pressure could not be maintained at 16,000 ft. Upon landing, the aircraft fails to depressurize and a door explodes open, killing a flight attendant.

2001 edit

  • August 25 - A twin engine Cessna 402B(N8097W) crashes shortly after takeoff about 200 ft.(70m) from the runway at Marsh Harbour, Abaco Island, Bahamas. Victims of the crash include the pilot, American singer Aaliyah Haughton (better known as Aaliyah) and entourage.
  • September 12 – A charted Aero Ferinco LET 410 aircraft crashes after taking off from Chichen Itza, Mexico, killing all 19 on board.
  • November 19 – A chartered IRS Aero Ilyushin Il-18 aircraft crashes in Kalyazin, Russia, killing all 27 on board.

2003 edit

2005 edit

2006 edit

  • March 18 – While landing in Madrid, Spain, an Air Algeria Boeing 737's right landing gear collapses. The aircraft veered off the runway and injured about 45 of the 108 on board. There were no fatalities.

2007 edit

  • May 4 - Two Cuban military deserters hijack a bus and reroute it to Havana Airport, before attempting to steal an empty passenger jet with the occupants of the bus as hostages. The plan is ultimately foiled but one hostage is killed before the men are captured.
  • July 17 - Aero República Flight 7330, an Embraer 190 crashed in a beach of Santa Martha Colombia, apparently unable to land due to bad weather. All passengers and crew members survive.

2008 edit

2009 edit

The entry above for June 10 is extremely unlikely to meet the notability guidelines defined at Wikipedia:WikiProject Aviation/Notability, so creating a separate article for it would be futile. Perhaps it could be added to 2009 in aviation instead, providing a reliable source is cited. --Itsfullofstars (talk) 17:02, 9 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

References edit

  1. ^ Todotango.com page describing the collision resulting in the death of Carlos Gardel retrieved 28 December 2008.
  2. ^ "Accident description: Eastern Provincial Airways Flight 102." aviation-safety.net. Retrieved: 26 March 2010.
  3. ^ Barnes, C.H. Handley Page Aircraft since 1907. London: Putnam, 1976. p. 550. ISBN 0 370 00030 7.
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ [2]