Current:Home > ContactNew search opens for plane carrying 3 that crashed in Michigan’s Lake Superior in 1968 -GoldenEdge Insights
New search opens for plane carrying 3 that crashed in Michigan’s Lake Superior in 1968
EchoSense View
Date:2025-04-09 21:57:46
A high-tech unmanned boat outfitted with sonar and cameras will try to solve the mystery of a 1968 plane crash that killed three people who were on a scientific assignment at Michigan’s Lake Superior.
Seat cushions and pieces of stray metal have washed ashore over decades. But the wreckage of the Beechcraft Queen Air, and the remains of the three men, have never been found in the extremely deep water.
An autonomous vessel known as the Armada 8 was in a channel headed toward Lake Superior on Monday, joined by boats and crew from Michigan Tech University’s Great Lakes Research Center in Houghton in the state’s Upper Peninsula.
“We know it’s in this general vicinity,” Wayne Lusardi, the state’s maritime archaeologist, told reporters. “It will be a difficult search. But we have the technology amassed right here and the experts to utilize that technology.”
The plane carrying pilot Robert Carew, co-pilot Gordon Jones and graduate student Velayudh Krishna was traveling to Lake Superior from Madison, Wisconsin, on Oct. 23, 1968. They were collecting data on temperature and water radiation for the National Center for Atmospheric Research.
The pilot’s last contact that day was his communication with the Houghton County airport. Searches that fall and in 1969 did not reveal the wreckage.
“It was just a mystery,” Lusardi said.
He said family members of the three men are aware of the new search.
It’s not known what would happen if the wreckage is located. Although the goal is to find a missing plane, Michigan authorities typically do not allow shipwrecks to be disturbed on the bottom of the Great Lakes.
This isn’t a solo mission. The autonomous vessel will also be mapping a section of the bottom of Lake Superior, a vast body of water with a surface area of 31,700 square miles (82,100 square kilometers).
The search is being organized by the Smart Ships Coalition, a grouping of more than 60 universities, government agencies, companies and international organizations interested in maritime autonomous technologies.
“Hopefully we’ll have great news quickly and we’ll find the plane wreck,” said David Naftzger, executive director of the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Governors & Premiers, a group of U.S. states and Canadian provinces.
“Regardless, we will have a successful mission at the end of this week showing a new application for technology, new things found on the lakebed in an area that’s not been previously surveyed in this way,” Naftzger said.
___
Follow Ed White at https://twitter.com/edwritez
veryGood! (1996)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Vacation rental market shift leaves owners in nerve-wracking situation as popular areas remain unbooked
- Pennsylvania Grand Jury Faults State Officials for Lax Fracking Oversight
- How Maryland’s Preference for Burning Trash Galvanized Environmental Activists in Baltimore
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- A Black 'Wall Street Journal' reporter was detained while working outside a bank
- How to keep your New Year's resolutions (Encore)
- Be on the lookout for earthworms on steroids that jump a foot in the air and shed their tails
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Epstein's sex trafficking was aided by JPMorgan, a U.S. Virgin Islands lawsuit says
Ranking
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- See Al Pacino, 83, and Girlfriend Noor Alfallah on Date Night After Welcoming Baby Boy
- 5 things to know about Southwest's disastrous meltdown
- It's a mystery: Women in India drop out of the workforce even as the economy grows
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- The Shiba Inu behind the famous 'doge' meme is sick with cancer, its owner says
- Americans are piling up credit card debt — and it could prove very costly
- BP and Shell Write-Off Billions in Assets, Citing Covid-19 and Climate Change
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Unclaimed luggage piles up at airports following Southwest cancellations
From East to West On Election Eve, Climate Change—and its Encroaching Peril—Are On Americans’ Minds
The Shiba Inu behind the famous 'doge' meme is sick with cancer, its owner says
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Transcript: Sen. Chris Coons on Face the Nation, July 9, 2023
Camp Pendleton Marine raped girl, 14, in barracks, her family claims
A Project Runway All-Star Hits on Mentor Christian Siriano in Flirty Season 20 Preview