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niceneasy
20th Oct 2005, 08:37
Frozen WWII airman found in glacier
Los Angeles
October 20, 2005 - 11:28AM

A frozen body believed to be of a WWII pilot has been found protruding from a glacier in California some 60 years after his plane crashed, officials told AFP.

Climbers found the ice-encased corpse on Sunday in the western US state's Sierra Nevada mountains, which lie about 300km north of Los Angeles, said Alexandra Picavet, a national parks spokeswoman.

"Two people were ice climbing in the Kings Canyon National park when they discovered the head and shoulders sticking out of the glacier," she told AFP of the body that still had a military parachute attached to it.

"Glaciers are very liquid, they're constantly moving, the glacier has deposited this person at the bottom of it," she said.

The body was found at an altitude of about 3,900 metres at the weekend, but recovery crews have not yet been able to reach the remote site.

"It's going to take some forensic efforts to find out who he is," she said, adding however that the body appeared to be that of a World War II airman, possibly an occupant of a training plane that crashed in the area 63 years ago.

"There was a plane crash, into this glacier in 1942. Four bodies were recovered five years later by the army, but we cannot definitively say that he is from that crash," Picavet said, adding that the military's POW-MIA or Missing in Action unit would make the determination.

- AFP

essexboy
20th Oct 2005, 08:58
In his pocket they found a frozen ATPL.

ayrprox
20th Oct 2005, 10:23
never let a serious topic get in the way of a great joke i always say.



:ok:

Red Mud
20th Oct 2005, 15:04
Perhaps he was on a crew layover and failed to return when he stepped out for some ice.

Jerricho
20th Oct 2005, 15:44
I think I saw that in a movie once......... Encino Man?!?!

(Or California Man for those in Blighty)

Bus429
20th Oct 2005, 17:31
Hate to play the prude but it's very likely that surviving family members may be able to get "closure" from this. Can we show a little more deference?

barit1
20th Oct 2005, 19:19
Latest news: (http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/states/california/northern_california/12952866.htm) Body recovered

sikeano
21st Oct 2005, 21:55
" in his pocket they found a frozen atpl"

the joke had to come from essex
:ok:

OldAg84
27th Oct 2005, 16:45
Here lies alone, for 60+ years, a fellow aviator who made the ultimate sacrifice for his country. Who knows, he may have been on his way to fly out of Thorpe Abbotts or Debden in your defense.

Show some respect. He was somebody's son, brother, or father. The comments really diminish the posters, as well as any desire of my own to PPrune.

It's low and you should be ashamed.

Atcham Tower
29th Oct 2005, 19:43
Well said, OA84. Thoughtless Brit black humour here, no malice intended. I'm sure you've made your point with the culprits!

Tempsford
31st Oct 2005, 20:19
OA 84,

Well said.

Temspford

OldAg84
7th Feb 2006, 00:37
Just thought everybody who thought it was hilarious should read the following. Short version-

His mother never got over his death and he was still remembered 60 years later by his family.

Pretty funny, huh?

Frozen WWII airman identified
Climbers found body in glacier, near where training craft crashed
From Thelma Gutierrez and Dree De Clamecy
CNN
Saturday, February 4, 2006; Posted: 9:53 p.m. EST (02:53 GMT)
ORANGE PARK, Florida (CNN) -- The U.S. military has identified the body of a World War II airman that climbers found in October at the bottom of a glacier in the Sierra Nevada mountain range.
Family members said they learned this week that the man was 22-year-old Army Air Corps cadet Leo Mustonen, who died in a 1942 plane crash.
Mustonen joined the Army during his senior year in high school in Brainerd, Minnesota, and was in training to become a navigator when he was reported missing on November 18, 1942.
Mustonen was son of Finnish immigrants. He was one of four cadets aboard a training flight that crashed in the Sierra Nevada mountains east of Fresno.
The National Park Service has said it is considering whether to launch a new search in the spring for the remains of the other three men, pilot Lt. Bill Gamber, and navigator trainees Glenn Munn and Melvin Mortensen.
A Defense Department official called the Mustonen family on Wednesday and confirmed that the identity of the body found in October, relatives said. "I felt in my heart all along that it was him," said Mustonen's niece Leane Mustonen Ross. "I've even made funeral arrangements and everything."
The family plans to have Mustonen's remains interred along with his parents in Brainerd, about 130 miles north of Minneapolis, she said.
"It's filling a pain and bringing it all together," another of Mustonen's nieces, Ona Lea Mustonen. "To know how someone died and what happened to them stops the question mark."
Some wreckage from the aircraft was found in 1947, but no bodies were discovered until October, when climbers spotted Mustonen's frozen remains in a mountainous area of Kings Canyon National Park.
Mustonen was wearing a WWII-era Army Air Corps uniform when forensic scientists removed his body from its icy tomb and took it to the largest forensic lab in the world, the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Investigators said then that they had narrowed the search for the body's identity to 10 World War II soldiers among thousands who are missing or unidentified.
Using hair and teeth, scientists determined that the man was at least 21 years old, and the bones indicated that he died when his plane crashed into the mountains six decades ago, forensic experts said.
"The injuries are so substantial, he didn't feel anything. He died immediately," said Dr. Robert Mann, a forensic anthropologist.
Scientists also found a corroded nameplate, clothing remnants, a broken plastic comb, dimes dating between 1936 and 1942, an Army Air Corps insignia on his uniform and three small leather-bound address books.
The pages of the address books were too decomposed to glean any useful information.
More than two dozen planes crashed in the Sierras during World War II.
Scientists said in November they were hopeful that DNA testing would help identify the airman. Forensic scientists collected DNA samples from family members of the men who were on the plane and, through the process of elimination, identified the remains as those of Mustonen.
Marjorie Freeman, a family friend, said Mustonen dreamed of becoming an engineer when he enlisted.
"Oh, Mr. and Mrs. Mustonen were so proud of that, and they were so happy he was really going to make something of himself," Freeman said.
She said Mustonen's mother, Anna, died in 1969 without ever coming to terms with her son's disappearance.
"I can see her so plainly, sitting across my mother-in-law's kitchen table -- my mother-in-law on one end and Mrs. Mustonen on the other -- having coffee, and tears running down her face."
Ross said the family -- which has traced relatives back to 1632 -- now feels "absolute elation and joy" about being able to write the last chapter in their uncle's life story.
"We are so delighted that we can take him and put him to rest with his mother and father. That's what we would like to do," she said

Vfrpilotpb
8th Feb 2006, 19:10
Old age,

Thank you for printing the story, like many young men from all over the World his young life was snuffed out far too early quite possibly through no faults of his, however it is more then gratifying to see the trouble that the US has gone to to locate the Airmans family and to assist in getting his mortal remains back to within the bosom of their family

LDS, may he rest at last.

Vfr