This article relies largely or entirely on a single source .(September 2024) |
Accident | |
---|---|
Date | 9 December 1956 |
Summary | Controlled flight into terrain |
Site | Mount Ioanna, Zolotoy Ridge, 35 km NE of Anadyr |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Lisunov Li-2 |
Operator | Aeroflot (Far Eastern Civil Aviation Directorate, Magadan aviation group) |
Registration | СССР-Л5033 |
Flight origin | Lavrentiya Bay Airport |
Stopover | Uelkal Airport |
Destination | Ugolny Airport, Anadyr |
Passengers | 7 |
Crew | 5 |
Fatalities | 12 |
Survivors | 0 |
The 1956 Anadyr Li-2 crash was an aviation accident involving a Li-2 aircraft operated by Aeroflot that occurred on Sunday, 9 December 1956, near Anadyr. The crash resulted in the deaths of all 12 people on board.
The Li-2, with factory number 18435609 and serial number 356-09, was produced by the Tashkent Aviation Production Association on 31 May 1950. The airliner was registered with tail number СССР-Л5033 and was transferred to the Main Directorate of Civil Air Fleet under the Council of Ministers of the USSR, which then assigned it to the 194th Flight Detachment of the Magadan Aviation Group under the Far Eastern Civil Aviation Directorate. The total flight time of the aircraft was 5,333 hours. [1] [2]
The aircraft was performing a scheduled flight from Lavrentiya to Anadyr with a final stopover in Uelkal after an overnight stay. On the morning of 9 December at 00:20, [* 1] the Li-2 with 5 crew members, 7 passengers, and 580 kilograms of cargo on board departed from Uelkal en route to Anadyr. According to the weather forecast, variable cloud cover at an altitude of 600–1,000 meters, a light westerly wind, and 4–6 km visibility were expected along the route. Similar weather conditions were expected in the Anadyr area. The flight was to be conducted at a cruising altitude of 1,500 meters. At 00:27, the crew contacted the dispatcher at Anadyr Airport and, after reporting a visual flight, requested the weather report. At 00:40, the crew contacted the Anadyr dispatcher again and asked if there were any departures from Anadyr to Provideniya Bay. After this, the aircraft L5033 no longer contacted the dispatcher and did not reestablish communication. [1]
The aircraft was found by an organized search 35 kilometers northeast of Anadyr, but the search party did not reach the crash site until 13 December. Flying 8 kilometers off course to the left of the flight path, the airliner, with engines running, crashed into a hill at an altitude of 720 meters on the southwest slope of Mount Ioanna (Zolotoy Ridge), exploded, and was completely destroyed. All 12 people on board were killed. [1]
The aircraft was supposed to fly along a valley between two ridges, but as it deviated 8 kilometers to the left, it ended up directly over the Zolotoy Ridge. This could have been avoided if the crew had known their location. However, no bearing records were found in the on-board logbook, and the crew had not requested bearings. Although the dispatcher at Anadyr received messages from aircraft L5033, the airport at Uelkal did not report that the aircraft had taken off until 01:05, when the crash had already occurred. In addition, the crew had entered the Anadyr airport control zone and even had visual contact with Anadyr, but did not inform the dispatcher about entering the zone. The dispatcher, in turn, did not monitor the flight, did not use the radio direction finder, including air defense radars, and did not inquire with the crew about the flight's progress. The commission established that this was standard practice at the airport's dispatch center. Surveys of other aircraft crews revealed that the ridge tops were covered with variable cloud cover and snow. The crew saw the airport and believed they were flying along the correct path over the valley, so they began descending without receiving clearance from the dispatcher. The airliner entered the clouds, after which the pilots unexpectedly collided with the mountain. [1]
According to the commission, the crash occurred because the aircraft deviated towards the mountains from the assigned flight path, after which the crew, unable to see the mountains obscured by snow and clouds, began to descend. It is likely that when the Li-2 was 100–200 meters above the mountains, it encountered downdrafts, which accelerated the descent. Contributing factors to the crash were the lack of discipline by the check pilot and the poor control of the flight by the dispatcher at Anadyr airport. [1]
Aeroflot Flight 721 was a scheduled domestic passenger flight between Moscow and Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk in the Russian SFSR. On Wednesday, 2 September 1964, the aircraft flying this route, an Ilyushin Il-18V, crashed into the side of a hill on approach to Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, killing 87 of the 93 people on board. At the time of the accident, it was the deadliest Il-18 crash and the deadliest aviation accident on Russian soil.
Aeroflot Flight 191 was a Soviet domestic passenger flight from Vnukovo International Airport to Ashkhabad International Airport, with a stopover in Krasnovodsk Airport. On 5 March 1963, the Ilyushin Il-18 crashed while landing at Ashgabat International Airport as a result of a dust storm. 12 of the 54 people on board were killed.
Aeroflot Flight 558 was a scheduled Ilyushin Il-18V domestic passenger flight from Karaganda to Moscow that crashed into a field in the Abzelilovsky District on 31 August 1972 as a result of a fire stemming from exploded passenger baggage, killing all 102 people on board.
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Aeroflot Flight 773 was a scheduled domestic Soviet Union passenger flight from Moscow to Simferopol that crashed following a bomb explosion on 10 October 1971.
Aeroflot Flight 207 was a Soviet domestic passenger flight from Rostov-on-Don Airport to Tbilisi International Airport that crashed on 10 June 1960 in the Tkvarcheli district. The crash involved an Ilyushin Il-14 aircraft operated by Aeroflot. There were 24 passengers and 7 crew on board, all of whom perished in the crash.
Aeroflot Flight 663 was a Soviet passenger flight from Tbilisi International Airport to Krasnodar International Airport that crashed on 24 August 1963, in the Kutaisi region. The crash involved an Aeroflot Avia 14. All 27 passengers and 5 crew on board were killed.
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Aeroflot Flight E-35D was an aviation disaster that occurred on Wednesday, August 1, 1990, in the vicinity of Stepanakert with a Yak-40 aircraft operated by Aeroflot, resulting in the deaths of 46 people.
The Aeroflot-Yugavia Flight 519 was a major aviation accident that occurred on Thursday, November 7, 1991, in the vicinity of Makhachkala involving a Yak-40 aircraft of the Yugavia aviation concern ("Aeroflot-Yugavia"), resulting in the deaths of 51 people.
The Yak-40 crash near Batumi was an aviation accident that occurred on July 15, 1975 in the mountains near Batumi involving a Yak-40 aircraft operated by Aeroflot, resulting in the deaths of 40 people.
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Aeroflot Flight Sh-88 was a scheduled domestic flight from Leninabad to Dushanbe that crashed on June 12, 1980, near Dushanbe, resulting in the deaths of all 29 people on board, due to crew errors and air traffic control failures.
Aeroflot Flight 11 was an aviation accident involving an Ilyushin Il-12 aircraft operated by Aeroflot, which occurred on Tuesday, October 1 1957 near the village of Aksha, Zabaykalsky Krai, Russia. The crash resulted in the deaths of 27 people.
Aeroflot Flight 6246 was an aviation accident that occurred on Saturday, January 13, 1990, 3 kilometers from Pervouralsk, during a forced landing on a snow-covered field of a Tu-134A airliner operated by Aeroflot. The flight was a domestic route from Tyumen to Ufa to Volgograd. Of the 71 people on board, 27 lost their lives.
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Aeroflot Flight 105 was an aviation accident involving an Ilyushin Il-12P aircraft operated by Aeroflot, which occurred on June 9, 1958 near Magadan, resulting in the deaths of 24 people.
The 1948 Bodaybo Li-2 crash was a fatal aviation accident involving a passenger aircraft operated by Aeroflot that occurred on April 24, 1948, when the plane lost control and collided with the Vitim River near Bodaybo, resulting in the deaths of 28 people.
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