Fatal UND plane crash likely caused by geese
Associated Press
Last update: April 9, 2008 - 7:32 AM
GRAND FORKS, N.D. - The dean of the University of North Dakota aerospace school says a National Transportation Safety Board report suggests a goose impact likely caused the crash of a UND airplane last October.
Twenty-year-old student Adam Ostapenko of Duluth, Minnesota, and 22-year-old instructor Annette Klosterman of Seattle died when the twin-engine Piper Seminole crashed in a swampy area in central Minnesota on Oct. 23.
The two were on a routine training flight from St. Paul, Minn., to Grand Forks.
UND aerospace dean Bruce Smith says there was a large dent on the plane's left wing and another dent on the plane's tail section, and that goose remains were found.
http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=20071102X01708&key=1
Goose impact? I know the rats with wings are big birds, but bringing down the plane...Maybe a contributing factor I would imagine. I would be curious to see the NTSB report.
UND'ers have you folks seen/heard anything from the school?