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Box canyon (aviation)

Updated: Wikipedia source

Box canyon (aviation)

In aviation, a box canyon, also referred to as a blind canyon, is a narrowing canyon with steep walls on either side of a floor that gradually increases in elevation. Box canyons often have narrow turning distances for aircraft and end in abrupt changes in elevations. Box canyons can also refer to limitations created by airspace restrictions or obstacles created by tall buildings in metropolitan areas. Flights into box canyons by pilots are often not intentional and due to pilot error. Box canyons can represent a risk of collision with terrain or stall.

Tables

· Notable accidents
Wichita State University football team plane crash
Wichita State University football team plane crash
Event
Wichita State University football team plane crash
Date
2 October 1970
Aircraft
Martin 4-0-4
Site
Mount Trelease, near Silver Plume, Colorado, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
32/40
Summary
The aircraft was carrying members of the Wichita State University football team scheduled to play against Utah State University. The pilots decided to fly up Clear Creek Canyon following US Highway 6 for what the first officer described to the passengers as a "scenic route". Flying below the surrounding ridge line, the crew's view of the end of the canyon was obscured by Mount Sniktau and the crew did not climb. The crew only discovered that they were traveling down a box canyon after passing Dry Gulch, by which time climbing over the terrain was impossible. The crew attempted to reverse course, but the available space to do so had reduced to the point where making a turn back impossible. The aircraft crashed into Mount Trelease at an elevation of 10,750 ft (3,280 m), killing 32 out of the 40 people on board.
Matilija Wilderness Beechcraft Bonanza crashes
Matilija Wilderness Beechcraft Bonanza crashes
Event
Matilija Wilderness Beechcraft Bonanza crashes
Date
30 June 2002
Aircraft
Two Beechcraft V35A Bonanza
Site
Matilija Wilderness, California, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
6/6 (Three fatalities on both aircraft)
Summary
A formation flight of eight aircraft distributed across three groups were flying out of Van Nuys Airport. In the first group, a lead Beechcraft Bonanza was being followed by two other Beechcraft Bonanzas. The first two aircraft in the group descended to between 500–1,000 ft (150–300 m) above ground level while the third followed behind and above. The two aircraft entered a box canyon and impacted terrain 4,925 ft (1,501 m) above sea level while maneuvering through it.
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Cessna 172 crash
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Cessna 172 crash
Event
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Cessna 172 crash
Date
29 November 2003
Aircraft
Cessna 172S
Site
Near Wikieup, Arizona, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
0/1
Summary
The pilot was flying an aircraft operated by the Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. He initially planned a cruising altitude of 9,500 ft (2,900 m) but descended to 7,000 ft (2,100 m) to view surface features. The aircraft subsequently entered mountainous terrain and flew into a box canyon. During his attempts to maneuver out of the canyon, the aircraft impacted terrain at an elevation of 7,200 ft (2,200 m), injuring the pilot.
United States Forest Service Cessna 206 crash
United States Forest Service Cessna 206 crash
Event
United States Forest Service Cessna 206 crash
Date
20 September 2004
Aircraft
Cessna U206G
Site
Near Essex, Montana, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
3/5
Summary
The public use flight was intended to transport four employees of the United States Forest Service to a Schafer Airport. Planned flight route followed U.S. Route 2. Terrain surrounding the flight path was obscured by a low cloud base. The pilot reported that he was over Essex and was about to leave the highway, but radar data showed he was actually short of the town. The aircraft then flew up a drainage basin associated with Tunnel Creek originating from the Flathead Range. The drainage ended in a box canyon. The pilot soon realized his mistake but ended up impacting terrain at 6,604 ft (2,013 m) while attempting to reverse course. Two out of the three people on board were killed, while one person dying of their injuries before the wreckage was found. Review of pilot logs showed that he only had 14 flight hours of experience flying at backcountry airports in the past two years.
Blackwater 61 crash
Blackwater 61 crash
Event
Blackwater 61 crash
Date
27 November 2004
Aircraft
CASA C-212
Site
Bamiyan Valley, Bamiyan, Afghanistan
Fatalities/Occupants
6/6
Summary
The aircraft was contracted by the Department of Defense to assist operations in Afghanistan. The CASA C-212 was flying from Bagram Air Base to Farah Airport to transport military cargo. After takeoff, the aircraft began flying down a valley that was not on a direct route to the destination. The cockpit voice recorder indicated that the captain and first officer knew that they were flying on a nonstandard route and captured conversations between the crew were saying that they were having "fun". Both pilots knew that they were approach the end of a box canyon for more than fifteen minutes prior to the crash, but they did not initiate a climb or a canyon escape turn. Only in the final seconds of flight did the captain attempt to resolve the situation. During the captain's turn back attempt, the aircraft impacted snow-covered terrain at an elevation of 14,650 ft (4,470 m). All six people on board were killed, although one person initially survived the impact.
New York City Cirrus SR20 crash
New York City Cirrus SR20 crash
Event
New York City Cirrus SR20 crash
Date
11 October 2006
Aircraft
Cirrus SR20
Site
Belaire Apartments, New York, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
2/2
Summary
New York Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle and a certified flight instructor were flying out of Teterboro Airport and air traffic control cleared them for a visual flight rules (VFR) departure while telling the pilots to out of class B airspace. The aircraft then flew up the East River, a "virtual" box canyon subject to VFR rules which ended north of Roosevelt Island with LaGuardia International Airport's class B airspace. Near the end of the VFR airspace, the pilots began a left turn to reverse course. The aircraft did not complete the turn before passing over the Manhattan shoreline. The pilots increased the bank angle to try and complete the turn, but the aircraft pitched down and crashed into the Belaire Apartments 333 ft (101 m) above sea level. Both pilots died and three people on the ground were injured. Radar data indicated that turn was started closer to the middle of the river rather than the eastern shoreline, reducing turning distance. An easterly wind present at the time of the accident also reduced the effective turn radius.
Mount Charleston Piper PA-32 crash
Mount Charleston Piper PA-32 crash
Event
Mount Charleston Piper PA-32 crash
Date
28 June 2008
Aircraft
Piper PA-32-300 Cherokee
Site
Mount Charleston, Nevada, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
4/4
Summary
The aircraft was flying out of North Las Vegas Airport. The pilot requested to air traffic control to fly on heading 230° and answered affirmatively to their question about if he was planning on flying southwest of the Spring Mountains. However, the aircraft travelled on a heading of 290° and eventually entered a valley approximately 300 ft (91 m) above ground level. The aircraft then crashed at an elevation of 7,660 ft (2,330 m) at the base of a box canyon, killing all four people on board. The mountain peaks surrounding the accident reached elevations of 10,000–11,918 ft (3,048–3,633 m). The density altitude at the accident site was above 11,000 ft (3,400 m). The aircraft did not have sufficient performance to perform a course reversal at the accident site.
Pacific Flying Club Cessna 152 crash
Pacific Flying Club Cessna 152 crash
Event
Pacific Flying Club Cessna 152 crash
Date
5 July 2011
Aircraft
Cessna 152
Site
Near Harrison Lake, British Columbia, Canada
Fatalities/Occupants
2/2
Summary
The aircraft flew into a canyon while on a training flight. The instructor pilot attempted to conduct a canyon escape turn, but due to the direction of the turn from the left side of the canyon to the right, and the position of the sun, the aircraft faced a shadowed surface that made it difficult for the pilots to visually determine their bank angle. The aircraft stalled and crashed into terrain 2,750 ft (840 m) above sea level, killing both people on board.
Lake Berryessa ICON A5 crash
Lake Berryessa ICON A5 crash
Event
Lake Berryessa ICON A5 crash
Date
8 May 2017
Aircraft
ICON A5
Site
Lake Berryessa, California, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
2/2
Summary
The aircraft was being flown by a pilot familiarizing a passenger recently hired by ICON Aircraft. The pilot flew the aircraft at a low altitude over the lake surface. A turn was then made into Little Portuguese Canyon, a canyon with rising terrain on either side. When the pilot realized that the canyon did not lead to more of the lake, as he likely thought, he attempted to conduct a 180° left turn to escape the canyon. Due to the limited aircraft performance and low altitude in respect to the surrounding terrain, the aircraft could not maintain clearance from terrain. Both people on board were killed in the subsequent crash at 440 ft (130 m) in elevation.
Cascade Glasair GlaStar crash
Cascade Glasair GlaStar crash
Event
Cascade Glasair GlaStar crash
Date
2 September 2017
Aircraft
Glasair GlaStar
Site
Near Cascade, Idaho, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
1/2
Summary
The aircraft was bought from an Idaho-based owner and the buyer asked a Georgia-based pilot to fly it back to Georgia. The pilot agreed and after spending a day familiarizing himself, flew the aircraft to a remote airfield to meet his cousin. The following day, the aircraft departed and began flying northeast. While en route, the aircraft entered a box canyon, and the pilot realized the aircraft's climb performance was not sufficient to climb over it. He attempted to conduct a canyon escape turn, but the aircraft stalled and crashed into terrain at an elevation of 7,500 ft (2,300 m). The pilot survived with serious injuries while his cousin was killed. The pilot had little experience flying in mountains, resulting in poor planning, navigation, and an over-estimation in the aircraft's climb performance at high altitudes.
Ju-Air Junkers Ju 52 crash
Ju-Air Junkers Ju 52 crash
Event
Ju-Air Junkers Ju 52 crash
Date
4 August 2018
Aircraft
Junkers Ju 52
Site
Piz Segnas, Grisons, Switzerland
Fatalities/Occupants
20/20
Summary
The aircraft was on the second day of a two-day sightseeing flight around the Alps. On the day of the accident, the aircraft was flying from Locarno Airport to Dübendorf Air Base. During the flight, the crew maneuvered the aircraft and entered a basin southwest of Piz Segnas to attempt to give the passengers a view of the Martinsloch natural rock window and tourist attraction. Due to their altitude and position, the crew did not give themselves necessary clearance to turn back. Downdrafts from the surrounding mountain tops caused the left wing to exceed the critical angle of attack and stall. The aircraft subsequently crashed into terrain at an elevation of 8,120 ft (2,470 m), killing all 20 people on board.
Alkan Air Cessna 208 crash
Alkan Air Cessna 208 crash
Event
Alkan Air Cessna 208 crash
Date
6 August 2019
Aircraft
Cessna 208B Grand Caravan
Site
Near Mayo, Yukon, Canada
Fatalities/Occupants
2/2
Summary
The pilot was on his fourth flight of the day and the fourth flight was the reverse leg of his previous flight from Mayo Airport to Rau Strip. A passenger boarded the aircraft before it departed from Rau Strip. The aircraft entered Granite Creek and the pilot continued despite poor weather conditions, likely due to him flying the route on the previous flight. The pilot then made an improper turn into a box canyon, mistaking it as the continuation of the proper flight path to the destination. The terrain awareness warning system did not effectively alert the pilot of the rising terrain, either because such warnings were common when flying in mountains in the past few minutes, or he silenced the system. The aircraft crashed into terrain 5,500 ft (1,700 m) above sea level, killing both people on board.
Telluride Beechcraft Bonanza crash
Telluride Beechcraft Bonanza crash
Event
Telluride Beechcraft Bonanza crash
Date
5 October 2020
Aircraft
Beechcraft S35 Bonanza
Site
Near Telluride, Colorado, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
2/2
Summary
Soon after departing from Telluride Regional Airport for a cross-country flight, the aircraft proceeded east into higher terrain rather than west into lower terrain. The aircraft continued in a gradual climb while entering a box canyon for 8 mi (13 km). Shortly after making a turn to the south, it crashed into terrain in a vertical impact, killing both people on board. The accident site was at 11,823 ft (3,604 m) in elevation, significantly below the elevations of the surrounding mountain peaks at 12,000–14,000 ft (3,700–4,300 m). The density altitude of the crash site was 13,604 ft (4,146 m), which diminished climb performance. The pilot likely lost control of the aircraft before it could gain enough altitude to cross terrain ahead.
LEC Aviation Beechcraft Bonanza crash
LEC Aviation Beechcraft Bonanza crash
Event
LEC Aviation Beechcraft Bonanza crash
Date
3 July 2021
Aircraft
Beechcraft G36 Bonanza
Site
Near Aspen, Colorado, United States
Fatalities/Occupants
2/2
Summary
Two pilots were flying the aircraft to ferry it to New York. It is unknown if the pilot flying had any prior experience with flying in the Rocky Mountains. After takeoff, the aircraft circled over Aspen/Pitkin County Airport until reaching an altitude of 10,000 ft (3,000 m). The aircraft subsequently turned east and turned into a valley that ended in a ridge before connecting with Colorado State Highway 82 preceding Independence Pass. At an altitude of 11,300 ft (3,400 m), the aircraft entered a semi-circular bowl region surrounded by 13,000 ft (4,000 m) mountains. The pilot flying attempted to turn back out of the canyon, but the aircraft impacted at an elevation of 11,050 ft (3,370 m), killing both people on board.
Event
Date
Aircraft
Site
Fatalities/Occupants
Summary
Image
Wichita State University football team plane crash
2 October 1970
Martin 4-0-4
Mount Trelease, near Silver Plume, Colorado, United States
32/40
The aircraft was carrying members of the Wichita State University football team scheduled to play against Utah State University. The pilots decided to fly up Clear Creek Canyon following US Highway 6 for what the first officer described to the passengers as a "scenic route". Flying below the surrounding ridge line, the crew's view of the end of the canyon was obscured by Mount Sniktau and the crew did not climb. The crew only discovered that they were traveling down a box canyon after passing Dry Gulch, by which time climbing over the terrain was impossible. The crew attempted to reverse course, but the available space to do so had reduced to the point where making a turn back impossible. The aircraft crashed into Mount Trelease at an elevation of 10,750 ft (3,280 m), killing 32 out of the 40 people on board.
Matilija Wilderness Beechcraft Bonanza crashes
30 June 2002
Two Beechcraft V35A Bonanza
Matilija Wilderness, California, United States
6/6 (Three fatalities on both aircraft)
A formation flight of eight aircraft distributed across three groups were flying out of Van Nuys Airport. In the first group, a lead Beechcraft Bonanza was being followed by two other Beechcraft Bonanzas. The first two aircraft in the group descended to between 500–1,000 ft (150–300 m) above ground level while the third followed behind and above. The two aircraft entered a box canyon and impacted terrain 4,925 ft (1,501 m) above sea level while maneuvering through it.
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Cessna 172 crash
29 November 2003
Cessna 172S
Near Wikieup, Arizona, United States
0/1
The pilot was flying an aircraft operated by the Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. He initially planned a cruising altitude of 9,500 ft (2,900 m) but descended to 7,000 ft (2,100 m) to view surface features. The aircraft subsequently entered mountainous terrain and flew into a box canyon. During his attempts to maneuver out of the canyon, the aircraft impacted terrain at an elevation of 7,200 ft (2,200 m), injuring the pilot.
United States Forest Service Cessna 206 crash
20 September 2004
Cessna U206G
Near Essex, Montana, United States
3/5
The public use flight was intended to transport four employees of the United States Forest Service to a Schafer Airport. Planned flight route followed U.S. Route 2. Terrain surrounding the flight path was obscured by a low cloud base. The pilot reported that he was over Essex and was about to leave the highway, but radar data showed he was actually short of the town. The aircraft then flew up a drainage basin associated with Tunnel Creek originating from the Flathead Range. The drainage ended in a box canyon. The pilot soon realized his mistake but ended up impacting terrain at 6,604 ft (2,013 m) while attempting to reverse course. Two out of the three people on board were killed, while one person dying of their injuries before the wreckage was found. Review of pilot logs showed that he only had 14 flight hours of experience flying at backcountry airports in the past two years.
Blackwater 61 crash
27 November 2004
CASA C-212
Bamiyan Valley, Bamiyan, Afghanistan
6/6
The aircraft was contracted by the Department of Defense to assist operations in Afghanistan. The CASA C-212 was flying from Bagram Air Base to Farah Airport to transport military cargo. After takeoff, the aircraft began flying down a valley that was not on a direct route to the destination. The cockpit voice recorder indicated that the captain and first officer knew that they were flying on a nonstandard route and captured conversations between the crew were saying that they were having "fun". Both pilots knew that they were approach the end of a box canyon for more than fifteen minutes prior to the crash, but they did not initiate a climb or a canyon escape turn. Only in the final seconds of flight did the captain attempt to resolve the situation. During the captain's turn back attempt, the aircraft impacted snow-covered terrain at an elevation of 14,650 ft (4,470 m). All six people on board were killed, although one person initially survived the impact.
New York City Cirrus SR20 crash
11 October 2006
Cirrus SR20
Belaire Apartments, New York, United States
2/2
New York Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle and a certified flight instructor were flying out of Teterboro Airport and air traffic control cleared them for a visual flight rules (VFR) departure while telling the pilots to out of class B airspace. The aircraft then flew up the East River, a "virtual" box canyon subject to VFR rules which ended north of Roosevelt Island with LaGuardia International Airport's class B airspace. Near the end of the VFR airspace, the pilots began a left turn to reverse course. The aircraft did not complete the turn before passing over the Manhattan shoreline. The pilots increased the bank angle to try and complete the turn, but the aircraft pitched down and crashed into the Belaire Apartments 333 ft (101 m) above sea level. Both pilots died and three people on the ground were injured. Radar data indicated that turn was started closer to the middle of the river rather than the eastern shoreline, reducing turning distance. An easterly wind present at the time of the accident also reduced the effective turn radius.
Mount Charleston Piper PA-32 crash
28 June 2008
Piper PA-32-300 Cherokee
Mount Charleston, Nevada, United States
4/4
The aircraft was flying out of North Las Vegas Airport. The pilot requested to air traffic control to fly on heading 230° and answered affirmatively to their question about if he was planning on flying southwest of the Spring Mountains. However, the aircraft travelled on a heading of 290° and eventually entered a valley approximately 300 ft (91 m) above ground level. The aircraft then crashed at an elevation of 7,660 ft (2,330 m) at the base of a box canyon, killing all four people on board. The mountain peaks surrounding the accident reached elevations of 10,000–11,918 ft (3,048–3,633 m). The density altitude at the accident site was above 11,000 ft (3,400 m). The aircraft did not have sufficient performance to perform a course reversal at the accident site.
Pacific Flying Club Cessna 152 crash
5 July 2011
Cessna 152
Near Harrison Lake, British Columbia, Canada
2/2
The aircraft flew into a canyon while on a training flight. The instructor pilot attempted to conduct a canyon escape turn, but due to the direction of the turn from the left side of the canyon to the right, and the position of the sun, the aircraft faced a shadowed surface that made it difficult for the pilots to visually determine their bank angle. The aircraft stalled and crashed into terrain 2,750 ft (840 m) above sea level, killing both people on board.
Lake Berryessa ICON A5 crash
8 May 2017
ICON A5
Lake Berryessa, California, United States
2/2
The aircraft was being flown by a pilot familiarizing a passenger recently hired by ICON Aircraft. The pilot flew the aircraft at a low altitude over the lake surface. A turn was then made into Little Portuguese Canyon, a canyon with rising terrain on either side. When the pilot realized that the canyon did not lead to more of the lake, as he likely thought, he attempted to conduct a 180° left turn to escape the canyon. Due to the limited aircraft performance and low altitude in respect to the surrounding terrain, the aircraft could not maintain clearance from terrain. Both people on board were killed in the subsequent crash at 440 ft (130 m) in elevation.
Cascade Glasair GlaStar crash
2 September 2017
Glasair GlaStar
Near Cascade, Idaho, United States
1/2
The aircraft was bought from an Idaho-based owner and the buyer asked a Georgia-based pilot to fly it back to Georgia. The pilot agreed and after spending a day familiarizing himself, flew the aircraft to a remote airfield to meet his cousin. The following day, the aircraft departed and began flying northeast. While en route, the aircraft entered a box canyon, and the pilot realized the aircraft's climb performance was not sufficient to climb over it. He attempted to conduct a canyon escape turn, but the aircraft stalled and crashed into terrain at an elevation of 7,500 ft (2,300 m). The pilot survived with serious injuries while his cousin was killed. The pilot had little experience flying in mountains, resulting in poor planning, navigation, and an over-estimation in the aircraft's climb performance at high altitudes.
Ju-Air Junkers Ju 52 crash
4 August 2018
Junkers Ju 52
Piz Segnas, Grisons, Switzerland
20/20
The aircraft was on the second day of a two-day sightseeing flight around the Alps. On the day of the accident, the aircraft was flying from Locarno Airport to Dübendorf Air Base. During the flight, the crew maneuvered the aircraft and entered a basin southwest of Piz Segnas to attempt to give the passengers a view of the Martinsloch natural rock window and tourist attraction. Due to their altitude and position, the crew did not give themselves necessary clearance to turn back. Downdrafts from the surrounding mountain tops caused the left wing to exceed the critical angle of attack and stall. The aircraft subsequently crashed into terrain at an elevation of 8,120 ft (2,470 m), killing all 20 people on board.
Alkan Air Cessna 208 crash
6 August 2019
Cessna 208B Grand Caravan
Near Mayo, Yukon, Canada
2/2
The pilot was on his fourth flight of the day and the fourth flight was the reverse leg of his previous flight from Mayo Airport to Rau Strip. A passenger boarded the aircraft before it departed from Rau Strip. The aircraft entered Granite Creek and the pilot continued despite poor weather conditions, likely due to him flying the route on the previous flight. The pilot then made an improper turn into a box canyon, mistaking it as the continuation of the proper flight path to the destination. The terrain awareness warning system did not effectively alert the pilot of the rising terrain, either because such warnings were common when flying in mountains in the past few minutes, or he silenced the system. The aircraft crashed into terrain 5,500 ft (1,700 m) above sea level, killing both people on board.
Telluride Beechcraft Bonanza crash
5 October 2020
Beechcraft S35 Bonanza
Near Telluride, Colorado, United States
2/2
Soon after departing from Telluride Regional Airport for a cross-country flight, the aircraft proceeded east into higher terrain rather than west into lower terrain. The aircraft continued in a gradual climb while entering a box canyon for 8 mi (13 km). Shortly after making a turn to the south, it crashed into terrain in a vertical impact, killing both people on board. The accident site was at 11,823 ft (3,604 m) in elevation, significantly below the elevations of the surrounding mountain peaks at 12,000–14,000 ft (3,700–4,300 m). The density altitude of the crash site was 13,604 ft (4,146 m), which diminished climb performance. The pilot likely lost control of the aircraft before it could gain enough altitude to cross terrain ahead.
LEC Aviation Beechcraft Bonanza crash
3 July 2021
Beechcraft G36 Bonanza
Near Aspen, Colorado, United States
2/2
Two pilots were flying the aircraft to ferry it to New York. It is unknown if the pilot flying had any prior experience with flying in the Rocky Mountains. After takeoff, the aircraft circled over Aspen/Pitkin County Airport until reaching an altitude of 10,000 ft (3,000 m). The aircraft subsequently turned east and turned into a valley that ended in a ridge before connecting with Colorado State Highway 82 preceding Independence Pass. At an altitude of 11,300 ft (3,400 m), the aircraft entered a semi-circular bowl region surrounded by 13,000 ft (4,000 m) mountains. The pilot flying attempted to turn back out of the canyon, but the aircraft impacted at an elevation of 11,050 ft (3,370 m), killing both people on board.

References

  1. The stall speed for an aircraft in landing configuration.
  2. Cruising Club of America
    https://cruisingclub.org/article/box-canyons
  3. "Flight in Mountainous Terrain"
    https://skybrary.aero/articles/flight-mountainous-terrain
  4. Pilot & Plane Magazine
    https://planeandpilotmag.com/box-canyon-hazards/
  5. Civil Air Patrol 2025, p. 2.
  6. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2013, p. 17.
  7. Forbes
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/digitalrules/2006/10/13/final-thoughts-on-cory-lidles-plane-crash/
  8. The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2006/10/the-cory-lidle-crash-one-fact-two-explanations/305323/
  9. "Flying in the Mountains"
    https://www.aopa.org/training-and-safety/online-learning/safety-spotlights/mountain-flying/flying-in-the-mountains
  10. Accident Case Study: Into Thin Air
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8PBUVMCbmFQ
  11. Civil Air Patrol 2025, p. 3.
  12. National Transportation Safety Board 2015, p. 1.
  13. "Density Altitude"
    https://www.aopa.org/training-and-safety/active-pilots/safety-and-technique/weather/density-altitude
  14. Accident Case Study: Into Thin Air
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8PBUVMCbmFQ
  15. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2013, p. 33.
  16. Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association
    https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all-news/2020/september/pilot/technique-performing-a-chandelle
  17. "Technique: Canyon Turn"
    https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all-news/2018/february/flight-training-magazine/technique-canyon-turn
  18. Civil Air Patrol 2025, p. 5.
  19. Civil Air Patrol 2025, p. 4.
  20. Federal Aviation Administration 2022, p. 2.
  21. Federal Aviation Administration 2012, p. 3.
  22. Accident Case Study: Into Thin Air
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8PBUVMCbmFQ
  23. "Memorial '70 - Memorial '70 Home"
    https://web.archive.org/web/20150129081956/http://webs.wichita.edu/?u=memorial&p=/index/
  24. National Transportation Safety Board 1971, p. 4.
  25. National Transportation Safety Board 1971, p. 26, 28.
  26. National Transportation Safety Board 1971, p. 29.
  27. National Transportation Safety Board 1971, p. 1.
  28. National Transportation Safety Board 2006a, p. 3.
  29. National Transportation Safety Board 2006a, p. 1.
  30. National Transportation Safety Board 2005a, p. 3.
  31. National Transportation Safety Board 2005b, p. 3.
  32. National Transportation Safety Board 2005b, p. 1, 3.
  33. National Transportation Safety Board 2005b, p. 4.
  34. National Transportation Safety Board 2005b, p. 1, 9.
  35. National Transportation Safety Board 2006b, p. 1.
  36. National Transportation Safety Board 2006b, p. 3.
  37. National Transportation Safety Board 2006b, p. 19–20.
  38. National Transportation Safety Board 2006b, p. 1, 11.
  39. National Transportation Safety Board 2007, p. 1.
  40. National Transportation Safety Board 2007, p. 1–2.
  41. "Tight Spot: Lessons from the Cory Lidle Accident"
    https://www.aopa.org/training-and-safety/air-safety-institute/accident-analysis/featured-accidents/tight-spot-lessons-from-the-cory-lidle-accident
  42. National Transportation Safety Board 2007, p. 11–12.
  43. National Transportation Safety Board 2009, p. 3–4.
  44. National Transportation Safety Board 2009, p. 1.
  45. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2013, p. 8.
  46. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2013, p. 24.
  47. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2013, p. i.
  48. National Transportation Safety Board 2017, p. 3.
  49. National Transportation Safety Board 2017, p. 1–2, 6.
  50. National Transportation Safety Board 2020, p. 4.
  51. National Transportation Safety Board 2020, p. 4, 7.
  52. "NTSB: Deadly plane crash happened after pilot accidentally flew into canyon"
    https://www.ktvb.com/article/news/local/idaho/ntsb-deadly-plane-crash-happened-after-pilot-accidentally-flew-into-canyon/277-479316567
  53. National Transportation Safety Board 2020, p. 1–2.
  54. Swiss Transportation Safety Investigation Board 2021, p. 11, 13.
  55. Swiss Transportation Safety Investigation Board 2021, p. 52.
  56. Swiss Transportation Safety Investigation Board 2021, p. 19, 53–54.
  57. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2020, p. 2.
  58. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2020, p. 21.
  59. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2020, p. 22.
  60. Transportation Safety Board of Canada 2020, p. 1.
  61. National Transportation Safety Board 2022, p. 1.
  62. National Transportation Safety Board 2023, p. 4.
  63. National Transportation Safety Board 2023, p. 2.
  64. National Transportation Safety Board 2023, p. 3.
  65. National Transportation Safety Board 2023, p. 1, 6.
Image
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