Anchorage, Alaska (Reuters) - Military officials say they had found what is believed to be old aircraft wreckage, along with some possible bone tissue, scattered on a glacier near Anchorage.
The wreckage was spotted on Sunday when Alaska Army National Guardsmen were conducting a helicopter training flight in the Knik Glacier region northeast of Anchorage, officials from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson says.
"It looks like it is a military aircraft," says Air Force Master Sergeant Mikal Canfield, a spokesman for the Anchorage base. No other details about the wreckage were available, he said.
The base called the wreck possibly "historic" and said the Federal Aviation Administration had issued a temporary flight restriction for the area, but did not elaborate.
Nothing has been taken from the site, pending further investigation, Canfield says.
At the request of Alaska military officials, the Hawaii-based U.S. Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) is trying to plan a recovery mission at the Knik Glacier site, a spokeswoman said.
JPAC, which focuses on search and recovery missions for missing U.S. service members, hopes to schedule an Alaska trip and line up necessary expertise to work on the glacier, said Captain Jamie Dobson, a spokeswoman for the command.
"We believe that there's a reason for JPAC to be involved," she says.
Latest from Aerospace Manufacturing and Design
- Pivotal achieves AS9100D certification
- CMMs for large-scale, heavy-duty measurement
- #80 Manufacturing Matters - Machining Strategies to Save Time and Improve your Process for MedTech Components with Kennametal Inc.
- Experts discuss the latest in toolholding technology
- Forecasting the year ahead in design and manufacturing
- GE Aerospace, Lockheed Martin demonstrate rotating detonation ramjet
- Stainless steel quick release ball lock pins
- Toray Advanced Composites, partners win JEC Innovation Award for Circularity & Recycling