Survivors of the San Francisco plane crash were being treated Sunday for injuries ranging from paralysis to "severe road rash."
But they're alive.
In all, 182 people were
hospitalized and 123 others walked away from Saturday's crash landing of
a Boeing 777. The number who emerged unscathed prompted the city's fire
chief to describe it as "nothing short of a miracle."
A day after Asiana
Airlines Flight 214 slammed onto the edge of a runway, severing its
tail, spun across the airport and caught fire, the death toll has
remained unchanged. Two 16-year-old girls died in the crash.
"We were expecting a lot
of burns," said Dr. Margaret Knudson, San Francisco General Hospital's
chief of surgery. "But we didn't see them."
Many of the injured said
they were sitting toward the rear of the aircraft, said Knudson. Several
suffered abdominal injuries and spine fractures, some of which include
paralysis and head trauma, Knudson said. Many patients also were treated
for "severe road rash," she said, which suggests "that they were
dragged."
The conditions of victims at other hospitals was unclear Sunday.
In Washington,
investigators were examining both flight data recorders, which could
reveal clues to what caused the crash landing.
Survivors and witnesses
reported the 7-year-old airliner appeared to be flying too low as it
approached the end of a runway near the bay.
"Stabilized approaches
have long been a safety concern for the aviation community,"
National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Deborah Hersman told CNN on Sunday, saying they represent a significant threat. "We see a lot of runway crashes."
National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Deborah Hersman told CNN on Sunday, saying they represent a significant threat. "We see a lot of runway crashes."
"We want to understand what was going on with this crew so we can learn from it," Hersman said.
'The wheels ... were too low, too soon'
Hersman said her team hopes to interview the pilots in the coming days.
Internal damage to the plane is "really striking," she said, and officials are thankful there weren't more deaths.
Nothing, including pilot
error, has been ruled out as a possible cause of the crash,
investigators said. The recorders have already arrived at an NTSB lab in
Washington for analysis.
Teen girls Ye Mengyuan
and Wang Linjia, both Chinese nationals, were killed in the crash,
Asiana Airlines said Sunday. There were 291 passengers and 16 crew
members aboard the two-engine jet, which had flown 10 hours from Seoul,
South Korea.
"The tail of the Asiana
flight hit the runway and the aircraft veered to the left out of the
runway," said Choi Jeong-ho, head of South Korea's Aviation Policy
Bureau.
Airport technology
called the Instrument Landing System, or ILS -- which normally would
help pilots correctly approach the runway -- was not operating at the
time, according to a Federal Aviation Administration bulletin.
"There are a lot of
systems that help support pilots" as they fly into busy airports,
Hersman said. Some of these systems alert the pilots. "A lot of this is
not necessarily about the plane telling them" that something may be
wrong, she said. "It's also about the pilot's recognition of the
circumstances and what's going on. So for them to be able to assess
what's happening and make the right inputs to make sure they're in a
safe situation -- that's what we expect from pilots."
The ILS integrates with
the aircraft's cockpit to trigger a audible warning, consultant and
retired 777 pilot Mark Weiss told CNN. "You hear a mechanical voice that
says, 'too low, too low, too low.'" The ILS is "nice to have," Weiss
said, "but it's not critical on the 777." There are redundant systems
aboard the aircraft that would provide similar warnings if the plane was
coming in too low, said Weiss, who has landed 777s hundreds of times.
Weiss said he's
perplexed by the details surrounding the crash landing. If the pilot was
somehow unaware the plane was coming in too low, Weiss wonders why
another member of the flight crew didn't speak up and warn him.
The pilot operating the
aircraft was a veteran who had been flying for Asiana since 1996, the
airline said. Evidence in the investigation will include data that show
what action the pilots took during the approach to the airport.
More clues could be
revealed in the next six to eight hours, former managing director of the
NTSB Peter Goelz told CNN's Candy Crowley on Sunday. That's how long
Goelz expects it will take analysts "to get a good picture" from data
inside the flight recorders. "It will be a fairly quick process," Goelz
said. "If the plane was coming in too low or too fast -- at the wrong
angle ... by the end of the day the National Transportation Safety Board
will have a fairly good idea what happened."
For investigators in the field, he said, it's important to interview the pilots "as soon as possible."
"But in an international investigation, it's somewhat of a more sensitive issue," Goetz acknowledged.
Let's keep praying for all those involved in the crash and their loved ones
Culled from cnn

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