logo
Plane carrying six crashes off San Diego coast

Plane carrying six crashes off San Diego coast

Telegraph09-06-2025
Six people are feared dead after a light aircraft plummeted into the Pacific Ocean three miles south-west of San Diego, California.
The twin-engined Cessna 414 crashed on Sunday at lunchtime. It was the second accident involving a private plane in the area within a matter of weeks.
According to the US coastguard, which sent a helicopter, two rescue boats and a light aircraft to the scene, there was no sign of survivors.
The seven-seat Cessna took off from San Diego for Phoenix, Arizona and crashed less than 30 minutes later.
Local reports said the pilot told air traffic controllers that the plane was struggling to maintain its altitude before plunging into the ocean.
Plane crashed into water at 'high speed'
'A debris field has been located, but I do not currently have the size of it,' coastguard Petty Officer Ryan Graves told NBC 7.
'I saw him come down at an angle. He wasn't flying straight to the ground,' Tyson Wislofsky, a witness, told the station.
'The next time he came out of the clouds, he went straight into the water. But after I saw this splash, about six seconds later, it was dead silent. I knew that they went in the water, nose first, at a high speed.'
The first Cessna 414 entered service in 1968, and an updated version was introduced in 1978.
'This is a twin-engine turbo, a piston airplane, that can fly on one of the two engines. So you could lose an engine,' Jim Kidrick, chief executive of the San Diego Air and Space museum, told ABC7.
Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board are examining the cause of the accident.
The worst crash involving a Cessna 414 took place in July 1982 when 12 people, including American Christian singer Keith Green, died shortly after taking off from a small airport in Texas. Investigations blamed the accident on the plane being overloaded.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NYC woman finds diamond for her engagement ring at Arkansas state park
NYC woman finds diamond for her engagement ring at Arkansas state park

The Guardian

time16 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

NYC woman finds diamond for her engagement ring at Arkansas state park

A New York woman has found a 2.30-carat colorless diamond in an Arkansas state park and repurposed it as her engagement ring. Micherre Fox, 31, of Manhattan, New York, went on a month-long hunt in July to the state's Crater of Diamonds state park to search for gems and came up lucky on the last day, according to Arkansas state parks. 'Having never seen an actual diamond in my hands, I didn't know for sure, but it was the most 'diamond-y diamond' I had seen,' Fox told the park service. The service said it was the third largest of 366 diamonds found in the park this year. It describes the Crater of Diamonds – a 37-acre, eroded surface of a volcanic crater near Murfreesboro, as 'the only place in the world where the public can search for real diamonds in their original volcanic source.' 'Any rock or mineral you find is yours to keep,' it says. 'You may bring your own mining equipment to search with (no battery-operated or motor-driven mining tools allowed), or rent tools from the park.' Waymon Cox, assistant superintendent of the park, said Fox's digging story 'highlights the fact that, even when putting forth your best effort, being in the right place at the right time plays a part in finding diamonds'. Fox's story comes with a message of self-determination. She decided two years ago that she wanted to find her own diamond for an engagement ring, telling the park service that 'there's something symbolic about being able to solve problems with money, but sometimes money runs out in a marriage. You need to be willing and able to solve those problems with hard work.' Her partner, and presumably prospective husband, was supportive of the project. 'I was willing to go anywhere in the world to make that happen,' Fox said. 'I researched, and it turned out that the only place in the world to do it was right in our back yard, in Arkansas.' When she spotted something glistening at her feet, Fox thought it could be a dew-covered spiderweb. But she soon realized it was a shiny stone. The park identified it as a diamond. 'I got on my knees and cried, then started laughing,' she said. Most of the diamonds found in the volcanic crater are white, brown and yellow. In total, over 75,000 diamonds have been unearthed there since diamonds were discovered in 1906. The largest discovered, at 40.23 carats, is named Uncle Sam, and now sits on display in the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. The dig-your-own/bring-a-trowel trend may catch-on as a signal of commitment, since the allure of diamonds is on the rocks. Lab-grown diamonds, created in plasma reactors, have badly damaged the natural diamond market, the Guardian reported earlier this year. Prices for both, lab-grown and natural, are falling fast and show no signs of stopping. De Beers, the biggest name in diamonds, said it began 2024 with a huge $2bn stockpile of diamonds and had not managed to shift it by the year's end. The company has cut production in its mines by 20%, and its owner, Anglo American, has put it up for sale.

American zoos don't feed ponies to the lions — should they?
American zoos don't feed ponies to the lions — should they?

Times

time18 minutes ago

  • Times

American zoos don't feed ponies to the lions — should they?

American zoos would never feed ponies to the lions — even though giving whole carcasses to predators is a 'healthy' practice, a North American zoo chief says. A Danish zoo has caused global outrage by asking the public to donate chickens, rabbits, guinea pigs and horses so they could be 'gently euthanised' and fed to its predators. Daniel Ashe, the chief executive of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA), said the idea would be 'frowned upon' in the US. 'These are cultural norms that we're talking about,' said Ashe, whose association has about 220 zoos in the US. 'The Danish zoo has a different cultural norm and practices.' Even so, experts are in agreement that feeding predators whole carcasses is important for their welfare. 'It's stimulating for the animals,' Ashe said. 'They're feeding on the meat, the cartilage, the tendon and bone and hide. The same feeding they do in nature. It's nutritious for them, it's healthy for them. Behaviourally, it's important to them as well.' Earlier this month Aalborg Zoo posted an appeal for pet donations on its Facebook page, which received a 'hateful and malicious' response, according to zoo officials who insisted it would 'stand by' the practice. Pernille Sohl, who donated her daughter's dying pony to Aalborg Zoo, told The Sunday Times the practice 'might sound very dramatic … but they are going to be put down anyway and it is not like they are alive when they are given to the predators'. • I gave the zoo my daughter's beloved pony to be fed to the lions So far this year, Aalborg Zoo has received 22 horses, 137 rabbits, 53 chickens and 18 guinea pigs, which have been turned into dinner for the lions, tigers, European lynxes and other carnivores who live there. Most other Danish zoos also accept pet donations. Ashe said the predators in AZA's zoos were fed animals that could be easily sourced via regulated commercial and agricultural suppliers, including pigs, sheep, goats and lamb. The zoos have to make sure they are sourcing 'meat products that are graded by the US Department of Agriculture,' he explained. Horse meat is not graded by the department so it is not available in America as a food supply for zoos. Some zoos, however, work with state and local natural-resource agencies to take roadkill such as deer for food, he said. Although Americans may not have an appetite for feeding their horses and guinea pigs to the lions, they are still fascinated by the sight of predators tucking into other animals, Ashe said, adding: 'I was at Denver Zoo about two weeks ago and they were carcass-feeding their lions. They were using pig carcasses. 'It was advertised to the guests at 1pm. Appropriate warnings were issued in case people didn't want to see something like this. But it was packed. I mean, you could not get a place next to the railing. People enjoy seeing animals engaging in natural behaviour.' If predators are fed only filleted meat they can develop nutritional deficiencies, dental problems, boredom-induced stress and unnatural feeding patterns, zoologists say. Aalborg Zoo is not the only European zoo that has faced backlash this month. Critics also rounded on Nuremberg Zoo in Germany last week after it announced it had culled 12 Guinea baboons due to chronic overcrowding in their enclosure. Half were then fed to the zoo's lions, tigers, maned wolves and marbled polecats. The skeletons of the remaining monkeys will be put on display in a museum. The baboons were decapitated and their hands and feet removed, 'out of respect for visitors' who would see the carnivores feeding, Jörg Beckmann, the zoo's deputy director, told DPA, the German news agency. Ashe said AZA's zoos did not cull their animals as a means of population control. 'We manage our animal population so that we don't have a lot of surplus animals,' Ashe said. 'We don't euthanise animals for management purposes. It's allowable under our policies but in general, if our members have an animal you don't need, then we look for an alternate home.' He added that Americans had a different attitude towards animal breeding from Europeans, which has led to their opposing practices around death. 'Other cultures believe that breeding is a necessary kind of life behaviour and that animals should be allowed to breed,' he said. 'But then that presents the challenge, what do you do with the animals that might be surplus?' AZA has 30 overseas members in countries like Korea, the UAE, Canada and Colombia. Not all follow the same practices as those in the US, Ashe said. He added that some of AZA's members in Korea did not euthanise animals that may be close to death. 'When we're doing accreditation visits, our inspectors are like, 'Wow, this animal seems like it's not in great condition.' 'They just have a different value set. 'Well, as long as it's eating and can interact with its social group.' And they want to support it. Whereas here in the US we would euthanise it. We have to put our standards into the context of different cultural norms.'

Harrowing death of explorer trapped in cave for 17 days who became morbid tourist attraction after his body was stolen
Harrowing death of explorer trapped in cave for 17 days who became morbid tourist attraction after his body was stolen

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Harrowing death of explorer trapped in cave for 17 days who became morbid tourist attraction after his body was stolen

It has been 100 years since a cave explorer became trapped in a Kentucky cave for 17 days and died there after efforts to rescue him were unsuccessful. The harrowing ordeal of Floyd Collins, 37, made global headlines at the time, as reporters closely followed the tragic endeavour, drawing thousands of people to the scene. A century has passed since the January 1925 tragedy, but Collins' story remains etched in history as the site of his death remains a morbid tourist attraction. A curious explorer since the age of six, Collins spent much of his time exploring rocky terrains and crevices. In 1918, he discovered the Great Crystal Cave in the Flint Ridge Cave system in south-central Kentucky. Wanting to make the caves more accessible to visitors, he decided to open up Sand Cave and began working to enlarge the small passage. On January 30, 1925, the explorer became trapped in a narrow crawl-way 55 ft below ground after a dislodged 27-pound boulder wedged his ankle against the cave wall. Collins desperately tried to free himself, but to no avail. A passerby miraculously heard the explorer's cries for help, and a rescue team was quickly formed to get him out. In the days that followed, Collins' ordeal became a national spectacle, with thousands of rescuers, engineers, geologists, journalists and even spectators rushing to the site. At one point, the mouth of the cave was flooded by thousands of curious onlookers and vendors selling food, drinks and souvenirs. According to the Kentucky National Guard, at least 50,000 people may have gathered there. But by day four of the rescue mission, a rock collapsed into the cave where Collins was, blocking the passageway used to pass him food and water. It took rescuers several more days to reach Collins, but by the time they found him, he had died three days prior - most likely from thirst, hunger and hypothermia. Recalling the day they reached his body, rescuers told the Kentucky National Guard: 'No sounds came from Collins at all, no respiration, no movement, and the eyes were sunken, indicating, according to physicians, extreme exhaustion going with starvation.' Sand Cave was sealed off and it took three more months for his body to be recovered. Although Collins was not known publicly for most of his life, the fame he gained from the rescue efforts and his death resulted in him being memorialised on his tombstone as the 'Greatest Cave Explorer Ever Known'. Due to wide coverage on his death, Collins' case has sparked curiosity throughout the years. At one point, his body was placed in a glass coffin on top of the cave to draw tourists, and several attempts were made to steal his body as a result. In one shocking instance in 1929, a thief managed to steal Collins' body, but police managed to track the criminal down and recover the corpse, which somehow lost a leg along the process. Collins' body was finally removed from the site in 1961 and was forever laid to rest at the Mammoth Cave Baptist Church. But his story continues to spark curiosity, with many explorers still flocking to Sand Cave, which is now known as Mammoth Cave National Park - a World Heritage Site.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store