K2 Aviation de Havilland Beaver (DHC-2) crash

Coordinates: 62°47′25″N 151°13′31″W / 62.790279°N 151.22528°W / 62.790279; -151.22528
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
K2 Aviation de Havilland Beaver (DHC-2) crash
A DHC-2 Beaver operated by K2 Aviation, similar to the one involved in the crash
Accident
Date4 August 2018 (2018-08-04)
SummaryImpacted glacier 10,920 feet (3,330 m) above sea level, possible controlled flight into terrain[1]
Site14 miles (23 km) southwest of Denali
62°47′25″N 151°13′31″W / 62.790279°N 151.22528°W / 62.790279; -151.22528[1]
Aircraft
Aircraft type DHC-2 Beaver
OperatorK2 Aviation
RegistrationN323KT[2][1]
Flight originTalkeetna, Alaska
Occupants5
Passengers4
Crew1
Fatalities5
Survivors0

On 4 August 2018, a de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver aircraft operated by K2 Aviation crashed in poor weather near Denali, Alaska, United States. All five people on board survived the crash, but died before rescuers were able to arrive at the scene. The five people consisted of the pilot and four Polish tourists.[3][4][5]

Initial rescue efforts

Upon crashing, the aircraft's

ELT alerted the Alaska Rescue Coordination Center at about 6:00 pm local time on Saturday. The pilot contacted K2 Aviation via satellite phone at 7:00 pm to report his situation and request help, stating the flight had run "into the side of a mountain."[6] The pilot called at least two times and reported his coordinates as well as the medical condition of the passengers. However, due to extreme weather and reduced visibility, only limited search and rescue operations were feasible. A National Guard HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter
, and a Denali National Park A-Star B3e helicopter were deployed on Saturday evening after the crash, but were unable to locate the crash site or make radio contact.

The rescue operations were coordinated by K2 Aviation, Alaska State Troopers, the National Park Service, Alaska Air National Guard, the NTSB, the FAA and other authorities. Aircraft involved in the search also included a Lockheed HC-130, and a de Havilland Beaver loaded with an emergency survival kit.[4]

Location identified

On the morning of Monday, August 6, just under 36 hours after the crash,[6] the National Park Service located the crash site by helicopter. The aircraft fuselage was identified in a crevasse on a hanging glacier about 10,920 feet (3,330 m) above sea level on Thunder Mountain at coordinates 62°47′25″N 151°13′31″W / 62.790279°N 151.22528°W / 62.790279; -151.22528,[1] about 14 miles (23 km) southwest of Denali.[1] Due to the steep and hazardous terrain, the helicopter could not land, and lowered a ranger by wire to investigate on foot.[1] When the ranger arrived at the site, the aircraft was buried in snow, and four occupants were deceased within.[3] The fifth occupant could not be located, but was presumed dead due to the absence of footprints leading away from the crash site, which would indicate an attempt to self-rescue.[5] The ranger was forced to evacuate within five minutes due to deteriorating weather conditions.[1] Four days later on August 10, a second followup mission located the final deceased passenger in the aft fuselage.[1][5]

The National Park Service reported the same day that there are no plans to recover the aircraft or the bodies of those killed, citing the treacherous location.[5]

Investigation

The

NTSB
investigated the incident, publishing a final report on 16 December 2019, although NTSB personnel were unable to access the hazardous site personally and instead relied on NPS ranger testimony:

The airplane was located on August 6 by a National Park Service (NPS) helicopter crew in a crevasse on a hanging glacier on Thunder Mountain (about 14 miles (23 km) southwest of the Denali summit) at an elevation at about 10,920 feet (3,330 m)
msl. Due to the location of the wreckage, NTSB personnel were unable to access the accident site. The airplane was highly fragmented and the right wing had separated and fallen several hundred feet below the main wreckage. The fuselage was fractured aft of the trailing edge of the wing and the fuselage was splayed open with blown snow inside. An impact mark consistent with the right wing was visible in the snow, and the airplane appeared to have impacted in a near wings-level attitude.
— National Transportation Safety Board, Aviation Accident Final Report, Accident Number: ANC18FA063[1]

Investigators were unable to determine a probable cause due to the inaccessibility of the crash site.[1] The report noted:

Although the known circumstances of the accident are consistent with a controlled flight into terrain event, the factual information available was limited because the wreckage was not recovered and no autopsy or toxicology of the pilot could be performed; therefore, whether other circumstances may have contributed to the accident could not be determined.
— National Transportation Safety Board, Aviation Accident Final Report, Accident Number: ANC18FA063[1]

The crash debris field was subsequently destroyed by

glacial activity
in April 2019, along with the presumed remains of the passengers and crew:

About 8 months after the accident, an assessment flight conducted by the National Park Service determined that during the winter, the hazardous hanging glacier at the accident site
calved, releasing an estimated 4,000–6,000 short tons (3,600–5,400 t) of ice and debris. There was no evidence of the airplane wreckage near the crash site, in the steep fall line, or on the glacier surface over 3,600 feet (1,100 m) below. [...] Further inspection of high-definition digital imagery taken during the [5 April 2019] assessment flight confirmed that the wreckage was not visible on the mountain face or in the surface debris at the base of Thunder Mountain.
— National Transportation Safety Board, Aviation Accident Final Report, Accident Number: ANC18FA063[1]

See also

  • 2013 Soldotna Rediske Air DHC-3 Otter crash

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Aviation Accident Final Report, Accident Number: ANC18FA063" (PDF). Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives. National Transportation Safety Bureau. 16 December 2019. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  2. ^ "ASN Wikibase Occurrence # 214087". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Search, rescue efforts halted in flightseeing plane crash near Denali". Archived from the original on 2018-10-12. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  4. ^ a b "Pilot reports 5 survived Alaska crash but plane, passengers still missing". Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  5. ^ a b c d "Fifth body found in crashed Alaska plane; no body recovery planned". Reuters. 2018-08-10. Retrieved 2019-04-30.
  6. ^ a b "Crash of a De Havilland DHC-2 Beaver I on Mt Kahiltna: 5 killed | Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives". www.baaa-acro.com. Retrieved 2023-07-31.