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LAN-Chile Flight 107 was a regular scheduled international flight from the Chilean capital Santiago to Buenos Aires in Argentina. On 6 February 1965, the Douglas DC-6B-404 operating the flight crashed in the Andes. All 87 occupants of the aircraft died in the crash.
Accident | |
---|---|
Date | 6 February 1965 |
Summary | Pilot error, controlled flight into terrain |
Site | Near San José Volcano, Chile |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Douglas DC-6B-404 |
Operator | LAN Chile |
Registration | CC-CCG |
Flight origin | Los Cerrillos Airport, Santiago, Chile |
Destination | Ministro Pistarini International Airport, Ezeiza, Argentina |
Occupants | 87 |
Passengers | 80 |
Crew | 7 |
Fatalities | 87 |
Survivors | 0 |
Accident
editThe DC-6 departed from Santiago-Los Cerrillos Airport on the morning of 6 February with 80 passengers and seven crew members on board, on a flight to Ministro Pistarini International Airport in Ezeiza, near Buenos Aires.[1] When the aircraft was at flight level 120, in the Las Melosas area of the Andes, it crashed into the side of La Corona Mountain, approximately 370 metres (1,200 ft) below its summit. There were no survivors.[2]
Twenty-two of the passengers had been players and staff of Santiago's Antonio Varas football team, who were on their way to Uruguay for a match against the Camadeo team in Montevideo.[3]
As of 2021, Flight 107 was the deadliest aviation disaster in Chilean history[4] and the second-deadliest aviation accident involving a DC-6, behind Olympic Airways Flight 954.
Cause
editThe accident investigation board attributed the accident to the pilot in command of the aircraft, who chose to follow a route that was neither in accordance with the approved flight plan nor the airline's operations manual. Weather was not a factor in the crash.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Aircraft accident Douglas DC-6B CC-CCG San José Volcano
- ^ "Chilean plane crash kills 87". Lewiston Morning Tribune. 7 February 1965. p. 1. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
- ^ Edgar A. Haine, Disaster in the Air (Cornwall Books, 2000) p153
- ^ Aviation Safety Network Database for Chile
- ^ Gero, David (1996). Aviation Disasters Second Edition. Patrick Stephens Limited. p. 61.