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The mystery continues in South Korea: First the black box, then the bird feathers!

Traces of bird feathers and blood were found in the engine of the Jeju Air plane involved in the crash in South Korea that killed 179 people. The emergence of new details with each passing day has made the causes of the crash the most important topic of discussion. The South Korean Ministry of Transportation recently reported that the black boxes containing the cockpit voice recorders stopped recording 4 minutes before the disaster. As authorities try to find the cause of the data loss in the boxes containing clues about the final moments of the flight, questions about the accident are growing.

Investigations into the plane crash that occurred at South Korea’s Muan International Airport and killed 179 people continue. Evidence has emerged that the plane, which left the runway after landing on its fuselage and hit a wall, was struck by a bird before the accident.
A source close to the investigation stated in a statement to the press that bird feathers and blood were found in both engines of the plane.
It was learned that the obtained video recordings showed the moment the bird hit the engine.
The South Korean Ministry of Transport has not yet made a statement on the issue.
A Boeing 737-800 type plane belonging to Jeju Air which took off from Bangkok, Thailand, skidded off the runway and crashed into a wall during landing at Muan International Airport on December 29.
While 179 people lost their lives in the accident, only two cabin crew members survived the plane with injuries.
The South Korean Ministry of Transport announced that the pilot requested emergency landing permission after the tower’s bird strike warning and landed with the landing gear retracted, and an investigation was launched to determine the exact cause of the accident.
It was determined that the black box on the Jeju Air plane stopped recording flight data 4 minutes before the accident, making it difficult to determine the cause of the accident.
After it was understood that there was data loss in the boxes containing clues about the last moments of the flight, authorities are trying to find out what happened. “Plans are being made to investigate the cause of the data loss during the ongoing accident investigation,” the ministry said in a statement.
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