LONGUE-POINTE-DE-MINGUE, Quebec (Aug. 7) - Canadian divers have stumbled upon what they believe is the wreckage of a U.S. Army air force amphibious plane that went down in the St. Lawrence River in 1942.
The government divers, who work for Parks Canada, announced Thursday that they came across the wreck while doing routine work near the village of Longue-Pointe-de-Mingan in eastern Quebec. It has not yet been confirmed whether it is the lost plane.
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U.S. Air Force / AP
A Consolidated OA-10 Catalina is shown at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. The plane is similar to the PBY-5A Catalina that crashed off the coast of Quebec in 1942.
The U.S. military considers the potential discovery a major find.
"It's tremendously important because of the history, of the co-operation between the United States and Canada, not only during that time but up to the present day and in the future," Joe Breen, the defense attache to the U.S. embassy in Canada, said Thursday.
According to the War Department, which later became the U.S. Department of Defense, the plane had completed the first leg of a routine flight and was taking off for the return trip to base when it capsized in rough weather in the eastern Gulf of Saint Lawrence on Nov. 2, 1942.
Nine people were aboard the PBY-5A Catalina, which was based at Presque Isle, Maine.
Four crew members survived. Five others died inside the aircraft. Their bodies have yet to be recovered.
Recent sonar data indicates the seaplane is in good condition and that human remains may be found.
Parks Canada said Canada and the United States will work together to salvage the wreckage and to explore the possibility of eventually recovering the remains of the missing crew members.
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Lost and Found
On December 19, 1801, Professor Robert Patterson sent a letter to his friend and fellow code and cipher fiend, President Thomas Jefferson, with a code the author called uncrackable. It took more than 200 years, but a mathematician who works in cryptology unlocked the secret message -- a joke on Jefferson, quoting the Declaration of Independence, which Jefferson helped write.
Library of Congress
Library of Congress





