Surprised that nobody has posted this so far, but a Cessna Caravan operating a scheduled flight from Unalakleet to Nome crashed on sea ice while holding awaiting runway being cleared of snow at Nome.
The plane was operating single pilot as is allowed and all nine passenger seats were filled.
The wreckage has been found and all aboard perished.
The aircraft appears to have impacted the ice at a high vertical and low forward velocity.
Cause is not yet known but either airframe icing or pilot spacial disorientation both seem possible. I have read in the past that the C208 does not handle ice well, but then most aircraft don't and ice is something to escape and any pilot operating in the Arctic would know this.
A very sad event, especially for a state where there is often no option other than to fly to where one needs to go.
The plane was operating single pilot as is allowed and all nine passenger seats were filled.
The wreckage has been found and all aboard perished.
The aircraft appears to have impacted the ice at a high vertical and low forward velocity.
Cause is not yet known but either airframe icing or pilot spacial disorientation both seem possible. I have read in the past that the C208 does not handle ice well, but then most aircraft don't and ice is something to escape and any pilot operating in the Arctic would know this.
A very sad event, especially for a state where there is often no option other than to fly to where one needs to go.