Hot News Trends and Views from around the world. On the Hour... Every Hour

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Explosion at Mojave Airport Kills 2

Associated Press 07.26.07, 8:58 PM ET
MOJAVE, Calif. -







An explosion killed two people and critically injured four others at a Mojave Desert airport site used by the pioneering aerospace company that sent the first private manned rocket into space, authorities said.

The blast at a Mojave Air and Space Port facility belonging to Scaled Composites LLC also left some toxic material, said Kern County fire Capt. Doug Johnston.

Scaled is the Mojave-based builder of SpaceShipOne, the first private manned rocket to reach space, and is developing a successor for the new space tourism business Virgin Galactic.

Aerospace designer Burt Rutan, who heads Scaled, told The Associated Press he had no information and was heading to the scene.

Video news helicopters showed wrecked equipment and vehicles at the airport in the high desert north of Los Angeles near Edwards Air Force Base. The blast site was in a remote unpaved section of the airport.

It was not immediately clear what caused the blast, said Tony Diffenbaugh, an inspector with the fire department.

Kern County fire crews and bomb experts were headed to the scene, where there was concern that airport personnel could be exposed to hazardous materials, said sheriff's Deputy Vince Martinez.

Read Full News at: Forbes.com

Labels:

Cause Found for Dallas Explosion

The explosions at a natural gas company sent columns of fire high into the air near downtown Dallas on Wednesday and launched flaming debris onto nearby roads and buildings.

Witness Trystan Bright said "flames started going everywhere, debris was flying all over the freeway with fire attached to it, you know it was kind of scary. Everybody started trying to put their car in reverse, a couple of wrecks almost occurred."

Parts of Interstates 30 and 35 had to be shut down, making traffic a nightmare.

Fire crews had to wait until the explosions ended before they could attack and extinguish the fire.

Chief Eddie Burns of Dallas Fire-Rescue says "we have the facility surrounded and we are basically just in a defensive mode, where we are just containing the fire."

Three people were injured but there are no deaths reported and no one missing in this rubble.

Fire officials say the whole thing was caused by a faulty connector used to join acetylene tanks during the filling process.

Report by: WRCB TV

Labels:

 
About US | Contact US | Privacy Policy