Sunday, May 10, 2009

Fwd: A second before death...



See the shots taken inside the plane before it crashed...Just unbelievable.


Photos taken from the GOL B 737 aircraft accident in Brazil

Last month a B737 had a mid air collision with a Embraer Legacy while cruising at 35,000 feet over South America . The Embraer Legacy, though seriously damaged, with the winglet ripped off, managed to make a landing at a nearby airstrip in the midst of the Amazon jungle.. The crew and passengers of the Embraer Legacy had no idea what they had hit. The B737,however, crashed killing all crew and passengers on board.. The two photos attached above were apparently taken by one of the passengers in the B737, after the collision and before the aircraft
crashed. The photos were retrieved from the camera's memory stick. You will never get to see photos like this. In the first photo there is a gaping hole in the fuselage through which you can see the tailplane and vertical fin of the aircraft. In the second photo one of the passengers
is being sucked out of the gaping hole.

Photos taken inside the plane.


These photos were found in a digital Casio Z750, amidst the remains in Serra do Cachimbo. Although the camera was destroyed, the Memory Stick was recovered. Investigating the serial number of the camera the owner could be identified, as Paulo G. Muller, an actor of a theatre for children known in the outskirts of Porto Alegre It can be imagined that he was standing during the impact with the Embraer Legacy, and during the turbulence he managed to take these photos, s econds after the tail loss the aircraft plunged, so the camera was found near the cockpit. the structural stress probably ripped the engines away, diminishing the falling speed, protecting the ele ctronic equipment but not, unfortunately, the victims. Paulo Muller leaves behind two daughters,Bruna and Beatriz, from a previous relationship.

2 comments:

Barako Brew said...

Man, that was some shot. Probably the best shot he took in his amateur career .... if this were a painting he'd be immortalized by it. Is it weird that I found it more fascinating than tragic? No need to answer that. :)

Unknown said...

Those are screen shots from the US TV show Lost

http://lostpedia.wikia.com/wiki/File:Oceanicbreakinside.jpg