Steve Fosset desaparecido
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Steve Fosset desaparecido
Espero que esteja bem......
EUA: Aventureiro da aviação Steve Fosset desaparecido
Um avião monolugar que transportava o aventureiro da aviação norte-americano Steve Fosset está desaparecido desde segunda-feira à noite, anunciaram hoje as autoridades federais dos EUA.
Fosset, 63 anos, detentor de mais de 100 recordes do mundo, descolou num monolugar Bellanca às 08:45 de segunda-feira (hora local) de uma pista privada num rancho do Nevada ocidental e não regressou como previsto. Um amigo alertou para o seu desaparecimento, disse Ian Gregor, um porta-voz da Aviação Federal no Maryland.
«A Patrulha Aérea Civil está à procura dele. O problema é que ele não preencheu o plano de voo», disse Gregor à Associated Press.
A busca está a ser coordenada pelo Centro de Coordenação de Salvamento da Força Aérea em Langley, Virgínia, disse Gregor.
«Estão a trabalhar nalgumas pistas, mas não sabem onde ele está agora», disse Gregor.
Steve Fosset mostrou-se sempre um insaciável na sua vida coroada por um palmarés de mais de 100 recordes do mundo, pelos quais quis sempre ir mais longe.
Em 2006, o seu último recorde de aviação levara-o a percorrer mais de 42.000 quilómetros à volta do mundo, em solitário e sem escala, a bordo do seu avião Virgin Atlantic/Global Flyer.
Prevenira então que não contava ficar por aí, tendo outros projectos em mente mas sem revelar quais. «Não tenho razões para parar», explicara em 2005.
Diário Digital / Lusa
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Fossett search goes on but hope wanes
RENO, Nevada (AP) -- Rescue crews searching for famed millionaire adventurer Steve Fossett stumbled upon more false leads Sunday when they discovered more plane wreckage -- but didn't find the missing aviator or his plane.
"Once again, you had your hopes raised and dashed, just as we have," Nevada Civil Air Patrol Maj. Cynthia Ryan told reporters during a news conference.
Rescue crews spotted two old wrecks, one of them from a U.S. Navy plane, southeast of the private ranch where Fossett was staying 80 miles southeast of Reno when he took off Monday for what was supposed to be a three-hour flight.
The false alarm further dampened spirits of the rescuers, whose chances of finding the 63-year-old Fossett alive in the rugged, concealing landscape of western Nevada are becoming more and more slim.
"The mood is very somber but very focused," Lyon County Undersheriff Joe Sanford said.
At least eight times during the search, rescue crews have spotted airplane wreckage they thought might be Fossett's only to learn it was from crashes years and sometimes decades ago.
To some, that is an ominous sign of how hard it will be to find the aviator.
"That's always a possibility -- that he may never be found," Sanford said. "But I'd like to believe that with our state-of-the-art technology, the chances of finding him are much better."
Fossett, a former commodities trader who was the first to circle the globe in a balloon, is considered an expert pilot and survivalist. Search teams have tried to remain optimistic but acknowledged the futility was beginning to take a toll.
"It's not frustrating, but tiring," Nevada National Guard Capt. April Conway said.
Leaders of the search-and-rescue operation have tried to put the best face on the discoveries of previously unknown crash sites. At the very least, they say, the finds have demonstrated that crews can indeed spot small planes from the air.
The search has spread across an area of 17,000 square miles, twice the size of New Jersey. Crews will continue combing sections of that vast landscape, but on Sunday they began focusing on the territory within 50 miles of the ranch. Most crashes occur within that radius during takeoffs or landings, Ryan said.
"We've got close to 100 percent covered, at least in some cursory fashion," Ryan said. "We have to eliminate a lot of territory."
The discovery of at least six previously unknown wrecks in such a short time has been a stark demonstration of the odds against finding Fossett's single-engine Bellanca Citabria Super Decathlon.
The Florida-based Air Force Rescue Coordination Center, which is helping coordinate the search, maintains a registry of known plane wreck sites.
The registry has 129 entries for Nevada. But over the last 50 years, aviation officials estimate, more than 150 small planes have disappeared in Nevada, a state with more than 300 mountain ranges carved with steep ravines, covered with sagebrush and pinon pine trees and with peaks rising to 11,000 feet.
"The mountains are quite rugged, and things don't always get found," said Ryan.
Once the search for Fossett is over, or significantly scaled back, inspectors from the Federal Aviation Administration likely will be sent to each of the newly discovered wrecks. They will try to identify the pilots and bring closure to their families, agency spokesman Ian Gregor said.
No human remains have been found at the crash sites discovered so far. But that's not a surprise, given their age and that the region is populated by coyotes and mountain lions.
News of the old wrecks has prompted inquiries from people wondering if the pilots or passengers may be long-lost family members.
"We received an e-mail from [a Florida man] and he said 'You know, that could be the wreckage of my father's airplane and it dates back to 1964.' He said if we can possibly find out any more he'd be happy to know about it," Ryan said.
Searchers are holding out hope of finding Fossett, said Sanford, the Lyon County undersheriff.
"With the resources and assets we have, I feel comfortable we'll find the plane in the near term," Sanford said. "Whether it'll be by us, a hunter or a skier, we'll find it. I like to believe the glass is half full."
CNN
---------------------------------------------------------------
RENO, Nevada (AP) -- Rescue crews searching for famed millionaire adventurer Steve Fossett stumbled upon more false leads Sunday when they discovered more plane wreckage -- but didn't find the missing aviator or his plane.
"Once again, you had your hopes raised and dashed, just as we have," Nevada Civil Air Patrol Maj. Cynthia Ryan told reporters during a news conference.
Rescue crews spotted two old wrecks, one of them from a U.S. Navy plane, southeast of the private ranch where Fossett was staying 80 miles southeast of Reno when he took off Monday for what was supposed to be a three-hour flight.
The false alarm further dampened spirits of the rescuers, whose chances of finding the 63-year-old Fossett alive in the rugged, concealing landscape of western Nevada are becoming more and more slim.
"The mood is very somber but very focused," Lyon County Undersheriff Joe Sanford said.
At least eight times during the search, rescue crews have spotted airplane wreckage they thought might be Fossett's only to learn it was from crashes years and sometimes decades ago.
To some, that is an ominous sign of how hard it will be to find the aviator.
"That's always a possibility -- that he may never be found," Sanford said. "But I'd like to believe that with our state-of-the-art technology, the chances of finding him are much better."
Fossett, a former commodities trader who was the first to circle the globe in a balloon, is considered an expert pilot and survivalist. Search teams have tried to remain optimistic but acknowledged the futility was beginning to take a toll.
"It's not frustrating, but tiring," Nevada National Guard Capt. April Conway said.
Leaders of the search-and-rescue operation have tried to put the best face on the discoveries of previously unknown crash sites. At the very least, they say, the finds have demonstrated that crews can indeed spot small planes from the air.
The search has spread across an area of 17,000 square miles, twice the size of New Jersey. Crews will continue combing sections of that vast landscape, but on Sunday they began focusing on the territory within 50 miles of the ranch. Most crashes occur within that radius during takeoffs or landings, Ryan said.
"We've got close to 100 percent covered, at least in some cursory fashion," Ryan said. "We have to eliminate a lot of territory."
The discovery of at least six previously unknown wrecks in such a short time has been a stark demonstration of the odds against finding Fossett's single-engine Bellanca Citabria Super Decathlon.
The Florida-based Air Force Rescue Coordination Center, which is helping coordinate the search, maintains a registry of known plane wreck sites.
The registry has 129 entries for Nevada. But over the last 50 years, aviation officials estimate, more than 150 small planes have disappeared in Nevada, a state with more than 300 mountain ranges carved with steep ravines, covered with sagebrush and pinon pine trees and with peaks rising to 11,000 feet.
"The mountains are quite rugged, and things don't always get found," said Ryan.
Once the search for Fossett is over, or significantly scaled back, inspectors from the Federal Aviation Administration likely will be sent to each of the newly discovered wrecks. They will try to identify the pilots and bring closure to their families, agency spokesman Ian Gregor said.
No human remains have been found at the crash sites discovered so far. But that's not a surprise, given their age and that the region is populated by coyotes and mountain lions.
News of the old wrecks has prompted inquiries from people wondering if the pilots or passengers may be long-lost family members.
"We received an e-mail from [a Florida man] and he said 'You know, that could be the wreckage of my father's airplane and it dates back to 1964.' He said if we can possibly find out any more he'd be happy to know about it," Ryan said.
Searchers are holding out hope of finding Fossett, said Sanford, the Lyon County undersheriff.
"With the resources and assets we have, I feel comfortable we'll find the plane in the near term," Sanford said. "Whether it'll be by us, a hunter or a skier, we'll find it. I like to believe the glass is half full."
CNN
---------------------------------------------------------------
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Novo Triangulo das bermudas
Três pilotos morrem perto do local onde desapareceu Steve Fossett
da Efe, em Washington
Três pilotos de competição aérea morreram em acidentes nos últimos quatro dias em Reno, no estado americano de Nevada, a cerca de 100 quilômetros do lugar onde desapareceu há duas semanas o milionário aventureiro Steve Fossett.
A Associação de Corridas Aéreas de Reno informou que devido aos acidentes tinha suspendido as provas previstas para esta sexta-feira, mas espera retomar a competição neste fim de semana.
A decisão foi tomada após a confirmação de que um piloto morreu quando seu avião caiu no aeroporto Reno-Stead, durante uma corrida aérea.
Na terça-feira havia morrido um ex-piloto da Marinha dos Estados Unidos, quando seu avião caiu durante um vôo de treino. Na quinta-feira foi a vez de outro piloto, de um avião que caiu e se incendiou durante uma prova assistida por centenas de pessoas.
Continua sem sucesso a busca de Fossett, que desapareceu na segunda-feira da semana passada, após decolar num pequeno avião de um aeroporto do estado. Ele se preparava para uma prova na qual pretendia romper o recorde de velocidade sobre terra.
Fossett, de 63 anos, tem em seu poder 93 recordes mundiais de vôo certificados pela Federação Aeronáutica Internacional e 23 marcas mundiais de navegação ratificadas pelo Conselho Mundial de Marcas de Velocidade em Navegação a Vela.
http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/mund ... 8668.shtml
Seria um novo triângulo das bermudas? a Área-51 é lá perto.
da Efe, em Washington
Três pilotos de competição aérea morreram em acidentes nos últimos quatro dias em Reno, no estado americano de Nevada, a cerca de 100 quilômetros do lugar onde desapareceu há duas semanas o milionário aventureiro Steve Fossett.
A Associação de Corridas Aéreas de Reno informou que devido aos acidentes tinha suspendido as provas previstas para esta sexta-feira, mas espera retomar a competição neste fim de semana.
A decisão foi tomada após a confirmação de que um piloto morreu quando seu avião caiu no aeroporto Reno-Stead, durante uma corrida aérea.
Na terça-feira havia morrido um ex-piloto da Marinha dos Estados Unidos, quando seu avião caiu durante um vôo de treino. Na quinta-feira foi a vez de outro piloto, de um avião que caiu e se incendiou durante uma prova assistida por centenas de pessoas.
Continua sem sucesso a busca de Fossett, que desapareceu na segunda-feira da semana passada, após decolar num pequeno avião de um aeroporto do estado. Ele se preparava para uma prova na qual pretendia romper o recorde de velocidade sobre terra.
Fossett, de 63 anos, tem em seu poder 93 recordes mundiais de vôo certificados pela Federação Aeronáutica Internacional e 23 marcas mundiais de navegação ratificadas pelo Conselho Mundial de Marcas de Velocidade em Navegação a Vela.
http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/mund ... 8668.shtml
Seria um novo triângulo das bermudas? a Área-51 é lá perto.
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Search called off for adventurous aviator Steve Fossett
The Civil Air Patrol has called off the search for multimillionaire adventurer Steve Fossett, nearly a month after he took off from a Nevada ranch, the agency announced Tuesday.
Fossett, 63, was last seen September 3 when he left hotel magnate Barron Hilton's private Minton, Nevada, ranch in a single-engine plane.
He was reported missing after his Bellanca Super Decathlon failed to return from the flight. Fossett was said to be scouting test sites for a future attempt at breaking the land speed record.
In a statement announcing the end of the effort, the Civil Air Patrol said rescuers covered 20,000 square miles in an effort to locate Fossett -- "one of the largest, most intensive searches for a missing aircraft in modern history."
"The Civil Air Patrol joins the rest of the aviation world and admirers worldwide in its disappointment in not locating Steve Fossett," said Brig. Gen. Amy S. Courter, the agency's acting national commander.
Fossett was the first man to fly around the world in a balloon alone and the first solo pilot to circle the globe without refueling. He holds 14 world records in airplane flight, two for ballooning, six in gliders and one in an airship, in addition to 11 records for sailing and one for cross-country skiing.
"This remarkable man showed us what grit and determination are all about," Courter said. "In his life, he chased and shattered world records, floating and flying farther and faster than anyone before. His adventures are many and his accomplishments profound. We regret that those adventures may have come to an end."
The search was scaled back September 19, but rescuers said they would continue to pursue tips sent by phone and e-mail.
CNN
-------------------------------------------------
Fim das buscas e nenhum sinal de Steve Fossett....
The Civil Air Patrol has called off the search for multimillionaire adventurer Steve Fossett, nearly a month after he took off from a Nevada ranch, the agency announced Tuesday.
Fossett, 63, was last seen September 3 when he left hotel magnate Barron Hilton's private Minton, Nevada, ranch in a single-engine plane.
He was reported missing after his Bellanca Super Decathlon failed to return from the flight. Fossett was said to be scouting test sites for a future attempt at breaking the land speed record.
In a statement announcing the end of the effort, the Civil Air Patrol said rescuers covered 20,000 square miles in an effort to locate Fossett -- "one of the largest, most intensive searches for a missing aircraft in modern history."
"The Civil Air Patrol joins the rest of the aviation world and admirers worldwide in its disappointment in not locating Steve Fossett," said Brig. Gen. Amy S. Courter, the agency's acting national commander.
Fossett was the first man to fly around the world in a balloon alone and the first solo pilot to circle the globe without refueling. He holds 14 world records in airplane flight, two for ballooning, six in gliders and one in an airship, in addition to 11 records for sailing and one for cross-country skiing.
"This remarkable man showed us what grit and determination are all about," Courter said. "In his life, he chased and shattered world records, floating and flying farther and faster than anyone before. His adventures are many and his accomplishments profound. We regret that those adventures may have come to an end."
The search was scaled back September 19, but rescuers said they would continue to pursue tips sent by phone and e-mail.
CNN
-------------------------------------------------
Fim das buscas e nenhum sinal de Steve Fossett....
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Sabe que eu no início tava levando beeeeeeeem a sério essa possibilidade de ele ter dado um perdido no mundo?!
Mas depois eu vi imagens da área...nossa, é difícil mesmo achar alguma coisa.
Ainda considero tambem essas duas opções como as únicas.
Ou morreu ou se mandou....
Acharam destroços de aviões que desapareceram a 30 anos! E não acharam o Steve....
Mas depois eu vi imagens da área...nossa, é difícil mesmo achar alguma coisa.
Ainda considero tambem essas duas opções como as únicas.
Ou morreu ou se mandou....
Acharam destroços de aviões que desapareceram a 30 anos! E não acharam o Steve....
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- rodrigo
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Ele deu um perdido igual ao Senna e a Diana. Tem uma teoria da conspiração de que existe uma empresa inglesa que ajuda celebridades a sumirem após uma farsa pública para mascarar essa fuga.
"O correr da vida embrulha tudo,
a vida é assim: esquenta e esfria,
aperta e daí afrouxa,
sossega e depois desinquieta.
O que ela quer da gente é coragem."
João Guimarães Rosa
a vida é assim: esquenta e esfria,
aperta e daí afrouxa,
sossega e depois desinquieta.
O que ela quer da gente é coragem."
João Guimarães Rosa
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