ANCHORAGE — A small airplane hit a bald eagle before it crashed and burst into flames just north of Anchorage last month, killing all four people on board, authorities said Wednesday.
It is the nation’s first civilian plane crash to result in deaths after an impact with a bald eagle, said Shaun Williams, a National Transportation Safety Board investigator. There have been other crashes involving eagle strikes that resulted in serious injuries, he said.
Remains of the eagle were found on the plane’s tail structure, Williams said.
The fire after the crash makes it hard to know for sure, but evidence indicates that’s where the eagle initially struck the aircraft. If so, it could have altered the plane’s path or damaged its tail structure, causing control issues for the pilot, Williams said, adding the agency is looking into it.
Also part of the investigation over the next 10 to 12 months will be determining if the bird struck the airplane before or after the Cessna 172 hit a 100-foot spruce tree, which investigators determined to be the plane’s initial impact point in the preliminary report released last week.
The pilot, co-pilot and two passengers died in the April 20 crash near a small airport about 20 miles north of downtown Anchorage. They were conducting an aerial survey for a private firm.
The discovery of the eagle’s involvement came when investigators found an unidentified substance on several portions of the plane’s frame and sent samples to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., for forensic analysis.
“There, they were able to determine that the portions of feather and other material came from an immature bald eagle,” Williams said. Other eagles were observed over the crash site and in the immediate vicinity, he added.
Killed in the crash were the pilot, George Kobelnyk, 64; co-pilot, Christian Bohrer, 20; and two passengers, Sarah Glaves, 36, and Kyle Braun, 27. The pilot was formerly with the NTSB and retired from the Federal Aviation Administration, Williams said.
The four were taking aerial photographs from an area near the Birchwood airport to the northern part of Cook Inlet.
Much of the wreckage was found in an area of dense spruce and birch trees. The post-crash fire consumed most of the fuselage.
The Alaska Department of Fish and Game’s website says Alaska has the largest population of bald eagles, which are found only in North America. It puts the Alaska bald eagle population at about 30,000 birds.
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This story has been corrected to show the agency the pilot retired from was the Federal Aviation Administration.