ti-pol a écrit :...
Des debris ont été retrouvé assez loin du crash.
C'est quoi "assez loin" ? Ils ont été voir sur place ou sont restés derrière leurs écrans d'ordinateurs comme d'habitude ? Ton site utilise Google earth ou Mappy pour interpréter des simples articles de presse ?! Ils ont calculé les distances comment, avec un routeplanner ? Tout ça fait très sérieux.

"The debris found in New Baltimore consisted of very light materials, such as paper, nylon, thin nylon, things that would, if in the air with the wind, would easily blow."
Ce qui "amusant" c'est que nos cons-pirationistes braillent qu'on aurait du abattre les autres avions et que celui-ci aurait été abattu selon leurs théories idiotes. Aucune logique ...
Pour Maussade qui aime les copier-collés :
Crash witnesses
Eyewitnesses saw the Boeing 757-200 flying low and then suddenly falling from the sky, resulting in a huge fireball and a 10-by-20-foot crater.[1]
"When it decided to drop, it dropped all of a sudden -- like a stone," said Tom Fritz, 63. Fritz was sitting on his porch along Lambertsville Road, about a quarter-mile from the crash site, when he heard a sound that "wasn't quite right" and looked up in the sky. "It was sort of whistling," he said. "It was going so fast that you couldn't even make out what color it was."[1]
Rose Goodwin, a freshman at Shanksville Stony Creek High School, was watching the television news in class when Flight 93 went down. "We felt it. We thought something must have landed on the roof," she said. "It was like, 'Oh my gosh, what was that?' We looked out the window and saw a black cloud. Everyone started screaming."[2]
"It shook the whole station," said Bruce Grine, owner of Grine's Service Center in Shanksville, about 2 1/2 miles from the crash.[3]
Karl Landis, 58, saw the crash from about a half-mile away while driving his pickup. "It came in, rolled slightly to the left and appeared to hit the ground at almost a 90-degree angle," he said. "It seemed like an eternity, but it must have been only a few seconds. It evaporated into a huge fireball that turned into black smoke."[3]
Anita McBride looked out her kitchen window in Lambertsville and watched in horror as United Airlines Flight 93 disappeared over a line of trees.[2]
Eric Peterson of Lambertsville was working with a friend in his auto shop this morning. They heard a plane and looked up and saw a large aircraft close to the ground. "I actually thought it was going to hit a house here in town," said Peterson. It blew out windows of a nearby farmhouse when it crashed. As it went over started going end over end, Peterson said, and then dropped below a tree line and exploded. Peterson saw a flash and then a mushroom cloud of smoke. The plane went down on a strip mine field. Peterson and his friend rushed to the field and looked for bodies, but couldn't find any. They called out, but heard nothing. There was a crater in the ground that was really burning. There were pieces of fuselage and clothing all over the area, burning, said Peterson. He said he didn't see any debris longer than a couple of feet long.[4]
Eric Peterson of Lambertsville looked up when he heard the plane. "It was low enough, I thought you could probably count the rivets," Peterson said. "You could see more of the roof of the plane than you could the belly. It was on its side. There was a great explosion and you could see the flames. It was a massive, massive explosion. Flames and then smoke and then a massive, massive mushroom cloud." Peterson called 9-1-1 and ran to the crash site but found only burning jet parts, pieces of clothing, and seat cushions.[2]
Viola Saylor of Lambertsville was outside talking to her sister. "We didn't hear that plane coming until it was right on top of us," she said. "Then there was a roar." She said the plane appeared to be gliding into the ground. "All at once it just stopped. There was no engine noise, nothing. Someone hollered, 'Oh my God!' and then there was a real loud thud."[2]
State trooper, Tom Spallone said the plane was still smoldering at 12:30. He said officials were trying to keep people from scene and confirmed that there are no survivors. He said the "debris field spread over an area size of a football field, maybe two footballs fields." The impact of the crash was so severe that the biggest piece of debris he has seen there is no bigger than 2 feet.[4]
The plane left a crater 20 feet wide and 15 feet deep, churning up chunks of deep brown earth and scorching trees in the nearby woods. State Police sealed off a 15-square-mile area around the crash site as a crime scene. All that was visible to reporters escorted near the site were metal plane parts that glinted in the late-afternoon sun. "The biggest pieces were no larger than a phone book," said Pennsylvania State Police Cmdr. Frank Monaco.[2]
.