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Originally posted by talisman
For some reason this thread is getting derailed into another discussion. It isn't about Payne Stewart or another crash, it is about flight 93.
So I believe what the OP wanted was this:
show 3+ pieces of recognizable plane debris* being excavated** from the Shanksville "pit."
So for this challenge, you have to show 3+ pieces of recognizable plane debris* being excavated** from the Shanksville "pit."
Originally posted by jthomas
BTW, how long do we all have to wait for you to get around to supporting your claims, Ultima1? One month? Two Months? A year?
Originally posted by ULTIMA1
Originally posted by jthomas
BTW, how long do we all have to wait for you to get around to supporting your claims, Ultima1? One month? Two Months? A year?
I am still wating for an answer if your common sense states that the learjet would make a bigger crater then a 757? Maybe someday you will learn to do research but i doubt it.
Originally posted by jthomas
Here are more facts and evidence to support my claim that the Payne Stewart small Learjet made a bigger crater then the crater at Shankesville that was supposed to have been made by a 757.
Its real easy to find the information and photos of the Payne Stewart crater and compare it with the crater at Shankesville.
en.wikipedia.org...
Impact occurred approximately 1713Z, or 1213 local, after a total flight time of 3 hours, 54 minutes, with the aircraft hitting the ground at a nearly supersonic speed and an extreme angle. The Learjet crashed just outside of Mina, South Dakota, in Edmunds County on relatively flat ground, and left a crater 42 feet (13 m) long, 21 feet (6.4 m) wide and 8 feet (2.4 m) deep.
upload.wikimedia.org...
upload.wikimedia.org...
Originally posted by jthomas
Here are more facts and evidence to support my claim that the Payne Stewart small Learjet made a bigger crater then the crater at Shankesville that was supposed to have been made by a 757.
Its real easy to find the information and photos of the Payne Stewart crater and compare it with the crater at Shankesville.
en.wikipedia.org...
Impact occurred approximately 1713Z, or 1213 local, after a total flight time of 3 hours, 54 minutes, with the aircraft hitting the ground at a nearly supersonic speed and an extreme angle. The Learjet crashed just outside of Mina, South Dakota, in Edmunds County on relatively flat ground, and left a crater 42 feet (13 m) long, 21 feet (6.4 m) wide and 8 feet (2.4 m) deep.
I've already shown you there is no official story so it is impossible to believe in something that does not exist. Did you forget, already?