Did Oceanic flight 815 really crash?
Some people believe all aboard Oceanic Flight 815 died when the plane broke apart over the Pacific and slammed into the island in pieces. But faithful watchers will know this — the island was real. Their adventures, the Others, the Dharma initiative, the mythology — it was all real.
Where did the lost plane crash?
This is the central moment in the series that kicked off its plotline, and marked the chronological beginning of the main characters’ adventures on the Island. Two months after the crash, wreckage was found in the Sunda Trench in the Indian Ocean near Bali.
Did anyone survive the plane crash lost?
On September 22, 2004 at 4:16 P.M., the airliner, carrying 324 passengers, deviated from its original course and disappeared over the Pacific Ocean. As a result of this, the plane crashed on an uncharted Island, with more than sixty-nine passengers (including the dog Vincent) and two crew members surviving.
When did the plane crash in Kuala Lumpur?
Just 39 minutes into its journey on March 8, 2014, from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, the plane lost contact with Malaysia Airlines and crashed at an unknown location killing all 239 people on board. What happened to the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370?
What was the name of the plane that went missing?
THE disappearance of flight MH370 is one of aviation’s greatest mysteries and has led to a number of theories. Just 39 minutes into its journey on March 8, 2014, from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, the plane lost contact with Malaysia Airlines and crashed at an unknown location killing all 239 people on board.
When did the Malaysia Airlines plane go missing?
7.24am: Malaysia Airlines released a statement announcing that Flight 370 is missing. Over the following weeks: A major search effort scours 1,700,000 square miles over a period of 52 days. April 28: The surface search is called off having failed to find any debris from the plane.
When did the plane disappear from the radar?
March 8, 2014, 1.21am: Thirty-nine minutes after take-off, over the South China Sea, the position symbol of flight 370 vanishes from the radar at the Kuala Lumpur Area Control Centre. Data from a Malaysian military radar shows the plane “almost immediately” turn southwest and back towards the Malay peninsula.
