Drifters to Help Recover Lost Aircraft

Researchers from AOML’s Physical Oceanography Division recently deployed three surface drifters and ten special spot trace drift buoys, all contributed by NOAA, in the Caribbean Sea to help to identify the site of where an Argentine Air Force C-54E Skymaster aircraft crashed in 1965. The data gathered by the drifters will help back track the possible location of the lost aircraft based on the location of life vests recovered during search operations after the crash. These deployments are part of a larger effort in support of the Argentine Air Force and search and rescue operations professionals from the US, Costa Rica, Panama and Argentina to locate the remains of the flights. Mr. Jose Rivera of NOAA, Captain Marcelo Covelli from Perfectura Naval Argentina and Licenciado Mariano Torres Garcia, representing the Argentine Air Force, are closely coordinating the 4th Expedition in the Caribbean Sea to locate the remains of TC48 and its 68 crew members on April 2018.

  • Surface drifters are used to collect climatological and oceanographic data. Image credit: NOAA
  • Surface drifter being deployed. Image credit: NOAA
  • 10 special spot trace drift buoys, similar to the life vests recovered from the 1965 crash. Image credit: NOAA

Image Captions

From Left:

  1. Surface drifters are used to collect climatological and oceanographic data. Image credit: NOAA

  2. 10 special spot trace drift buoys, similar to the life vests recovered from the 1965 crash. Image credit: NOAA

  3. Surface drifter being deployed. Image credit: NOAA