receding glaciers revealing ww2 wrecks

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simbo

receding glaciers revealing ww2 wrecks

Post by simbo »

has anybody heard of any recent discoveries of aircraft in the mountains of europe? i would think that with the effects of global warming and the shallower than ever snowpacks that there might be a few b17s or b24s ect. starting to come into view after all these years. just a thought.
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hang the expense
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global warming

Post by hang the expense »

COME ONNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNGlobal warming!
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aerovin2
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Post by aerovin2 »

Let me see now. Since 1945 the globe has cooled enough for the snowpack to cover all these wrecks and for P-38s to have 250 feet of ice piled on top of them, and then it warms enough that all that accumulation is now melting off. Hmmm. Could it be cyclical?
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hang the expense
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GW

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Oh no, you dont think....If there is a knock at your door dont answer it,its algor.
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simbo

receding glaciers revealing ww2 wrecks

Post by simbo »

i guess you guys arent aware of the fact that the arctic and antarctic ice packs are receding at record rates in the last few summers. maybe it might apply to other areas of the world also. if you read again you might see that it was just a question. remember this when they do start to pop out. gee, tough crowd around here!javascript:emoticon(':roll:')
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DryMartini
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Not tough

Post by DryMartini »



Not a tough crowd. Just having some fun.
We've all heard about wrecks in Norway
popping up, but I have not heard anything
about Greenland or Antarctica.

As "the lost squadron" recovery proved,
just because it is in ice doesn't mean it's
preserved.

-Bill
B-17E 41-2595 "Desert Rat" Restoration Team
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hang the expense
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Gw

Post by hang the expense »

Oh simbo, dont tell you buy that nonsense.And I hope you dont think it is caused by man. :roll:
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simbo

Post by simbo »

interesting responses to a fairly legitimate question. NO would have done.
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Post by DIK SHEPHERD »

And everybody calls me sarcastic. :lol:
gary1954
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Re: Not tough

Post by gary1954 »

[quote="DryMartini"]

Not a tough crowd. Just having some fun.
We've all heard about wrecks in Norway
popping up, but I have not heard anything
about Greenland or Antarctica.

As "the lost squadron" recovery proved,
just because it is in ice doesn't mean it's
preserved.

Yuppers, I undestand that a B-17 was actually reached, and it was torn apart from the weigth and the shifting ice.
I think the most remarkable recoveries were the 3 B-26 Marauders lifted out of Canada (I think Dik Sheperd was assoicated with that) and the recovery of some flyables out of Centeral America. Glacier Girl was a remarkable recover in the engineering to get her our of the ice, I would say they were fortunate and extremely L u c k y.
Gary
" Never in the history of mankind have so many owed so much to so few." Sir Winston Churchill
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DryMartini
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BIG STOOP

Post by DryMartini »


That B-17, called "Big Stoop", was the first plane
reached on the expedition. It was pretty much flattened.

Don Brooks, being one of the main funders of the expedition,
wound up with parts and pieces from it. Don said it was scary
under the ice. It would crack, and sound like a shotgun going off.
Cold, wet, and dangerous.
-Bill
B-17E 41-2595 "Desert Rat" Restoration Team
gary1954
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Big Stoop

Post by gary1954 »

I imagine the parts alone are worth a bundle to someone. I also imagine that the cost of that expedition was staggering, and put any profit margine at the low end. Still, I would have loved to have just put my hands on the parts...parts of history, a time when this country pulled together for victory.
Gary
" Never in the history of mankind have so many owed so much to so few." Sir Winston Churchill
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