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- AP 02/27 20:42 EST
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- KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -- Treasure salvors have discovered the wreckage of
- a plane they say might be one of five Navy aircraft that disappeared more
- than 40 years ago on a routine training flight.
- The crew of Mel Fisher's Swordfish pulled a Grumman Avenger airplane from
- the 1940s out of mud in water 33 feet deep 20 miles west of Key West on
- Tuesday, said Don Kincaid, vice president of Treasure Salvors Inc.
- The disappearance of the Navy's Flight 19, consisting of the five TBM-3
- Avengers, torpedo-bombers normally based on carriers, and the loss of a
- twin-engine Navy Martin Mariner subsequently sent to search for them is
- frequently mentioned in the lore of the "Bermuda Triangle."
- The Bermuda Triangle, off the southeastern coast of the United States,
- was popularized by Charles Berlitz in a best-selling 1974 book of that title
- that told of ships and planes vanishing into a mysterious void.
- Navy and Coast Guard officials have scoffed at the theory, noting that
- some of the world's busiest shipping and flight lanes criss-cross the area
- and that over the years accidents are bound to happen.
- Key West also is far beyond the westernmost boundary of the legendary
- Miami-Bermuda-San Juan triangle.
- But Fisher has said he believes the plane could be one of the five.
- Salvors "stumbled across" the wreckage in 1971 during a search for a
- galleon and were in the vicinity again last week, Kincaid said. "Mel just
- wanted to pull it up out of curiosity," he said. "We ran across it again on
- a whim. We're not in the business of looking for Bermuda Triangle
- wreckage."
- The five Avengers left a World War II training field at Fort Lauderdale
- on a training mission Dec. 5, 1945, each carring a pilot and radio
- operator.
- The flight leader was soon lost in hazy skies, despite the prevalent
- clear and sunny weather. Radio contact was maintained until the planes ran
- out of fuel still searching for the way home.
- A Martin Mariner, a twin-engine patrol plane with 13 aboard, left the
- Banana River Naval Air Station near Cocoa Beach the next morning to search
- for the squadron.
- The plane failed to return and no trace was ever found. No human remains
- was found in the Avenger salvaged this week, according to Fisher's son
- Kim.
- When the fuselage was hoisted from the water, an open parachute spilled
- out, said Scott Nierling, a Treasure Salvors photographer.
- The plane, estimated at 40 feet from tip to tail and with a wingspan
- around 60 feet, was brought to Key West for identification. It still bears
- the paint of Navy stripes.
- Mel Fisher, who was away on vacation Friday, said earlier that he wanted
- to put it in the front yard of the Treasure Salvors Museum in Key West.
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