WWII fighter plane hailed the ‘aviation equivalent of Tutankhamun’s Tomb’ found pr
WWII fighter plane hailed the ‘aviation equivalent of Tutankhamun’s Tomb’ found preserved in the SaharaA Second World War aeroplane that crash landed in the Sahara Desert before the British pilot walked to his death has been found almost perfectly preserved 70 years later.The Kittyhawk P-40 has remained unseen and untouched since it came down on the sand in June 1942 and has been hailed the “aviation equivalent of Tutankhamun’s Tomb”.It is thought the pilot survived the crash and initially used his parachute for shelter before making a desperate and futile attempt to reach civilisation by walking out of the desert.The RAF airman, believed to have been Flight Sergeant Dennis Copping, 24, was never seen again.The single-seater fighter plane was discovered by chance by Polish oil company worker Jakub Perka exploring a remote region of the Western Desert in Egypt, about 200 miles from the nearest town.Most of its cockpit instruments are intact and it still had it guns and ammunition before they were seized by the Egyptian military.There are also signs of the makeshift camp the pilot made alongside the fuselage.No human remains have been found but it is thought the pilot may lie within a 20 mile radius of the plane.read more -- source link
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