1947 BSAA Avro Lancastrian Star Dust accident

"Stendec" redirects here. For other uses, see Stendec (disambiguation).

BSAA Star Dust accident

BSAA Lancastrian 3 G-AGWH painted as Stardust.
Accident summary
Date 2 August 1947
Summary Controlled flight into terrain due to severe weather conditions[1][2]
Site Mount Tupungato, Argentina
33°22′15″S 69°45′40″W / 33.37083°S 69.76111°W / -33.37083; -69.76111Coordinates: 33°22′15″S 69°45′40″W / 33.37083°S 69.76111°W / -33.37083; -69.76111
Passengers 6
Crew 5
Fatalities 11 (all)
Aircraft type Avro Lancastrian
Operator British South American Airways
Registration G-AGWH
Flight origin Morón Airport and Air Base (MOR/SADM)[3]
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Destination Los Cerrillos Airport (ULC/SCTI)[4]
Santiago, Chile

Star Dust (registration G-AGWH) was a British South American Airways (BSAA) Avro Lancastrian airliner which crashed into Mount Tupungato in the Argentine Andes on 2 August 1947, during a flight from Buenos Aires to Santiago, Chile. A comprehensive search of a wide area (including what is now known to have been the crash site) was fruitless, and the fate of the aircraft and occupants remained unknown for over 50 years. An investigation in 2000 after wreckage of G-AGWH had been found determined the crash was caused by weather-related factors,[1][2] but until then speculation had included theories of international intrigue, intercorporate sabotage and even abduction by aliens.

In the late 1990s, pieces of wreckage from the missing aircraft began to emerge from the glacial ice. It is now assumed that the crew became confused as to their exact location while flying at high altitudes through the (then poorly understood) jet stream. Mistakenly believing they had already cleared the mountain tops, they started their descent when they were in fact still behind cloud-covered peaks, and Star Dust crashed into Mount Tupungato, killing all aboard and burying itself in snow and ice.

The last word in Star Dust's final Morse code transmission to Santiago airport, "STENDEC", was received by the airport control tower four minutes prior to its planned landing and repeated twice; it has never been satisfactorily explained.

Background

The aircraft, an Avro 691 Lancastrian 3, was built as constructor's number 1280 for the Ministry of Supply to carry 13 passengers, and first flew on 27 November 1945. Its civil certificate of airworthiness (CofA) number 7282 was issued on 1 January 1946. It was delivered to BSAA on 12 January 1946, was registered on 16 January as G-AGWH and given the individual aircraft name "Star Dust".[5]

Star Dust carried six passengers and a crew of five on its final flight. The captain, Reginald Cook, was an experienced Royal Air Force pilot with combat experience during World War II—as were his first officer, Norman Hilton Cook, and second officer, Donald Checklin. Reginald Cook had been awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) and the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC). The radio operator, Dennis Harmer, also had a record of wartime as well as civilian service. The crew also included Iris Evans, a flight attendant or "Stargirl", who had previously served in the Women's Royal Naval Service ("Wrens").[6]

The passengers were Casis Said Atalah, a Palestinian returning home to Chile from a visit to his dying mother; Jack Gooderham and Harald Pagh, businessmen; Peter Young, an agent for Dunlop; Paul Simpson, a British civil servant; and Marta Limpert, a Chilean resident of German origin who had been stranded in Germany during the war along with her husband. Atalah is said to have had a diamond with him (stitched into the lining of his suit), Limpert was bringing her dead husband's ashes with her, and Simpson was functioning as a King's Messenger with diplomatic documents destined for the British embassy in Santiago.[7]

Star Dust's last flight was the final leg of BSAA Flight CS59, which had started in London on an Avro York named Star Mist on 29 July 1947, landing in Buenos Aires on 1 August.[8] Marta Limpert was the only one of the six passengers known for certain to have initially boarded Star Mist in London[9] before changing aircraft in Buenos Aires to continue on to Santiago with the other passengers.[10]

Disappearance

The Andes above modern-day Santiago.

The flight left Buenos Aires at 1.46 PM on 2 August[11] and was apparently uneventful until the radio operator (Harmer) sent a routine message in Morse code to the airport in Santiago at 5.41 PM, announcing an expected arrival of 5.45 PM.[12] However, Star Dust never arrived, no more radio transmissions were received by the airport, and intensive efforts by both Chilean and Argentine search teams, as well as by other BSAA pilots, failed to uncover any trace of the aircraft or of the people on board.[4] The head of BSAA, Air Vice Marshal Don Bennett, personally directed an unsuccessful five-day search.[13]

A report by an amateur radio operator who claimed to have received a faint SOS signal from Star Dust initially raised hopes that there might have been survivors,[4] but all subsequent attempts over the years to find the vanished flight failed. In the absence of any hard evidence, numerous theories arose —including rumours of sabotage (compounded by the later disappearance of two other aircraft also belonging to British South American Airways);[7] speculation that the flight might have been blown up to destroy diplomatic documents being carried by passenger Paul Simpson;[7] or even the suggestion that Star Dust might have been taken or destroyed by a UFO (an idea fuelled by unresolved questions about the flight's final Morse code message).[12]

Discovery of wreckage and reconstruction of the crash

A main wheel from the Star Dust, found amidst the wreckage in 2000.

In 1998, two Argentine mountaineers climbing Mount Tupungato—about 60 mi (97 km) west-southwest of Mendoza City, and about 50 mi (80 km) east of Santiago—found the wreckage of a Rolls-Royce Merlin aircraft engine, along with twisted pieces of metal and shreds of clothing, in the Tupungato Glacier at an elevation of 15,000 ft (4,600 m).[4] In 2000, an Argentine Army expedition found additional wreckage—including a propeller and wheels (one of which had an intact and inflated tyre)—and noted that the wreckage was well localised, a fact which pointed to a head-on impact with the ground, and which also ruled out a mid-air explosion.[14] Human remains were also recovered, including three torsos, a foot in an ankle boot and a manicured hand. By 2002, the bodies of five of the eight British victims had been identified through DNA testing.[15]

A recovered propeller showed that the engine had been running at near-cruising speed at the time of the impact. Additionally, the condition of the wheels proved that the undercarriage was still retracted, suggesting controlled flight into terrain rather than an attempted emergency landing.[16] During the final portion of Star Dust's flight, heavy clouds would have blocked visibility of the ground. It has therefore been suggested that, in the absence of visual sightings of the ground due to the clouds, a large navigational error could have been made as the aircraft flew through the jet stream—a phenomenon not well understood in 1947, in which high-altitude winds can blow at high speed in directions different from those of winds observed at ground level.[17] If the airliner, which had to cross the Andes mountain range at 24,000 ft (7,300 m), had entered the jet-stream zone—which in this area normally blows from the west and south-west, resulting in the aircraft encountering a headwind—this would have significantly decreased the aircraft's ground speed. Mistakenly assuming their ground speed to be faster than it really was, the crew may have deduced that they had already safely crossed the Andes, and so commenced their descent to Santiago, whereas in fact they were still a considerable distance to the east-north-east and were approaching the cloud-shrouded Tupungato Glacier at high speed.[7] Some BSAA pilots, however, have expressed scepticism at this theory; convinced that Cook would not have started his descent without a positive indication that he had crossed the mountains, they have suggested that strong winds may have brought down the craft in some other way.[18] One of the pilots recalled that "we had all been warned not to enter cloud over the mountains as the turbulence and icing posed too great a threat."[13]

A similar set of events to those that doomed Star Dust also caused the crash of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 in 1972 (depicted in the film Alive), though there were survivors from that crash because it involved a glancing blow to a mountainside rather than a head-on collision.[19]

Star Dust is likely to have flown into a nearly vertical snow field near the top of the glacier, causing an avalanche that buried the wreckage within seconds and concealed it from searchers. As the compressed snow turned to ice, the wreckage would have been incorporated into the body of the glacier, with fragments emerging many years later and much farther down the mountain. Between 1998 and 2000, about ten per cent of the wreckage emerged from the glacier, prompting several re-examinations of the accident. More debris is expected to emerge in future, not only as a result of normal glacial motion, but also as the glacier melts.[7]

A 2000 Argentine Air Force investigation cleared Captain Cook of any blame, concluding that the crash had resulted from "a heavy snowstorm" and "very cloudy weather", as a result of which the crew "were unable to correct their positioning".[1][2]

STENDEC

The last Morse code message sent by Star Dust was "ETA SANTIAGO 17.45 HRS STENDEC".[12] The Chilean Air Force radio operator at the Santiago airport described this transmission as coming in "loud and clear" but very fast; as he did not recognise the last word, he requested clarification and heard "STENDEC" repeated twice in succession before contact with the aircraft was lost.[20][21] This word has not been definitively explained and has given rise to much speculation—including suggestions (made before the wreckage was finally discovered) that the aircraft and those aboard could have been the victims of a UFO encounter.[12]

The staff of the BBC television series Horizon—which presented an episode in 2000 on the Star Dust disappearance—received hundreds of messages from viewers proposing explanations of STENDEC. These included suggestions that the radio operator, possibly suffering from hypoxia, had scrambled the word DESCENT (of which STENDEC is an anagram); that STENDEC may have been the initials of some obscure phrase; or that the airport radio operator had misheard the Morse code transmission despite it reportedly having been repeated multiple times. The Horizon staff concluded that, with the possible exception of some misunderstanding based on Morse code, none of these proposed solutions was plausible.[12] In the absence of new clues, the meaning of STENDEC is likely to remain a mystery.[7][22]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 "Crash pilot cleared 50 years on". The Guardian. 7 July 2000. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 "Pilot finally cleared over mystery of 1947 mountain plane disaster". The Birmingham Post. 8 July 2000. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  3. Rayner (2002), p. 112.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Stardust Lost in the Andes". Vanishings!. 27 September 2003. History International.
  5. http://www.flywiththestars.co.uk/Airline/Fleet/fleet.htm
  6. "Lost plane found in Andes". BBC News. 26 January 2000. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Vanished: The Plane That Disappeared". BBC. 2 November 2000. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  8. Rayner (2002), pp. 119–122.
  9. Rayner (2002), p. 119.
  10. "Vanished: 1947 Official Accident Report". PBS. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  11. Rayner (2002), p. 124.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 "'STENDEC' – Stardust's final mysterious message". BBC. 2 November 2000. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  13. 1 2 Jackson, Archie (1997). Can Anyone See Bermuda? Memories of an Airline Pilot (1941–1976). Gillingham, Dorset: Cirrus Associates. p. 75. ISBN 0-9515598-5-0.
  14. Rayner (2002), p. 212.
  15. "DNA clues reveal 55-year-old secrets behind crash of the Star Dust". The Guardian. 6 September 2002. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  16. Rayner (2002), p. 213.
  17. Rayner (2002), p. 214.
  18. Rayner (2002), pp. 215–216.
  19. "I Am Alive: The Crash of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571". History.com. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  20. Ministry of Civil Aviation, "Report on the accident to Lancastrian III G-AGWH which occurred on 2nd August 1947 in the Andes Mountains South America", Accidents Investigation Branch Report No. C.A. 106. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office 1948
  21. Rayner (2002), p. 125.
  22. Rayner (2002), pp. 226–229.

References

Rayner, Jay (2002). Star Dust Falling: The Story of the Plane that Vanished. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-60226-X. 

External links

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