Air France debris


In Photo: In this photo released by Brazil's Air Force, Brazil's Navy sailors recover debris from the missing Air France jet at the Atlantic Ocean, Monday, June 8, 2009. A U.S. Navy team was flying to Brazil on Monday with high-tech underwater listening devices to help the search for the black boxes from an Air France plane that crashed into the Atlantic Ocean. (AP Photo/Brazil's Air Force)

In Photo: In this photo released by Brazil's Air Force, Brazil's Navy sailors recover debris from the missing Air France jet at the Atlantic Ocean, Monday, June 8, 2009. A U.S. Navy team was flying to Brazil on Monday with high-tech underwater listening devices to help the search for the black boxes from an Air France plane that crashed into the Atlantic Ocean. (AP Photo/Brazil's Air Force)

In Photo: This photo released by Brazil's Air Force shows recovered debris belonging to the Air France flight AF447 in a Brazilian Navy ship at the Atlantic Ocean, Monday, June 8, 2009. A U.S. Navy team was flying to Brazil on Monday with high-tech underwater listening devices to help the search for the black boxes from an Air France plane that crashed into the Atlantic Ocean. (AP Photo/Brazil's Air Force)

In Photo: Brazil's Air Force official Henry Munhoz, shows a photo taken early today with a piece of the Air France 447 flight being recovered from the Atlantic ocean, during a press conference in Recife, northeastern Brazil, Monday, June 8, 2009. Officals corrected to sixteen the total number of bodies plucked from the water about 45 miles (70 kilometers) from where the Air France jet sent out messages signaling electrical failures and loss of cabin pressure, Brazil's military said. (AP Photo/Roberto Candia)

In Photo: Brazil's Air Force official Henry Munhoz, right, and Navy official Giucemar Tabosa Cardoso attend a press conference in Recife, northeastern Brazil, Monday, June 8, 2009. A U.S. Navy team was flying to Brazil on Monday with high-tech underwater listening devices to help the search for the black boxes from the Air France plane that crashed into the Atlantic Ocean. (AP Photo/Roberto Candia)

In Photo: Federal Police forensic officers prepare a container for the arrival of bodies found during search operations of the missing Air France jet, in Fernando de Noronha island airport, off the northeast coast of Brazil, Monday, June 8, 2009. A U.S. Navy team was flying to Brazil on Monday with high-tech underwater listening devices to help the search for the black boxes from an Air France plane that crashed into the Atlantic Ocean. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)

In Photo: In this photo released by the French Defense Ministry on Monday June 8, 2009, divers aboard a French Navy dinghy, foreground, collect a debris near the French frigate "Ventose", in the search area of Air France's Flight 447 in the Atlantic ocean. Search ships methodically worked through debris from a doomed Air France jet Sunday, recovering 15 more bodies near the spot where the Airbus A330 is believed to have gone down a week ago. (AP Photo/Marine Nationale/French Navy/HO)

In Photo: In this photo released by the French Defense ministry on Monday June 8, 2009, a French Navy diver from the Ventose frigate approaches floating debris in the search area of Air France's Flight 447 in the Atlantic ocean. Search ships methodically worked through debris from a doomed Air France jet Sunday, recovering 15 more bodies near the spot where the Airbus A330 is believed to have gone down a week ago. (AP Photo/Ecpad/French Defense Ministry/HO)

In Photo: A Brazilian Air Force plane flies over an aeronautical radar station during search operations of the missing Air France jet, in Fernando de Noronha island airport, off the northeast coast of Brazil, Monday, June 8, 2009. A U.S. Navy team was flying to Brazil on Monday with high-tech underwater listening devices to help the search for the black boxes from an Air France plane that crashed into the Atlantic Ocean. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)

No comments: