![]() 01/08/2018 at 19:35 • Filed to: Planelopnik | ![]() | ![]() |
Came across on one of the urban exploration channels I subscribe to.
![]() 01/08/2018 at 19:59 |
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Dang. That’s incredible that it’s still up there, though.
![]() 01/08/2018 at 20:10 |
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Not super unusual. Sometimes it is just difficult to get the debris out. Sometimes there is no point. Here is a B-36 nose section in Canada.
![]() 01/08/2018 at 20:21 |
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There’s a B52 wreck in Maine that I visited once before, at Elephant Mountain.
![]() 01/08/2018 at 21:00 |
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The Butterfly trail in the Catalinas north of Tucson has an old jet sitting on it. Crashed back in the ‘50s. It’s pretty eery.
americanexpeditioners.com/plane-crash-mount-lemmon-butterfly-trail/
![]() 01/08/2018 at 21:09 |
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The Butterfly trail in the Catalinas north of Tucson has an old F86 sitting at the end of it. It’s pretty creepy. A guy crashed his plane into the Superstition Mountains a few years ago. It was pretty sad watching a plane burn in a place I spend so much time. Definitely added to the eeriness of those mountains.
![]() 01/08/2018 at 21:32 |
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Not to be disrespectful, but part of me would love to use that as a greenhouse roof. I’d feel bad doing so if people passed away in the crash, though.
![]() 01/09/2018 at 04:22 |
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to me it seems strange it’s still there, but if it’s too hilly or inaccessible fair enough.
![]() 01/16/2018 at 20:48 |
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5 dead, 12 survivors, and one missing nuclear bomb.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1950_British_Columbia_B-36_crash
![]() 01/16/2018 at 22:52 |
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I remember hearing about some divers finding a nuke off the coast of BC a year or two ago. I think it was a dummy, though, or at least wasn’t loaded with radioactive material.