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MSGT Eric Wass (left), an Explosive Ordnance Disposal member, gets a location fix with his portable global positioning system as SRA Scott McCullough (background) surveys the area in an attempt to locate any remnants of the A-10 and the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs

MSGT Eric Wass (right), an Explosive Ordnance Disposal member, gets a location fix with his portable global positioning system (GPS) as another member of the A-10 recovery team takes a short break. The diverse terrain and thick tree cover has made getting a satellite fix with the GPS difficult in their efforts to locate any remnants of the A-10 and the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs

MSGT Eric Wass (right), an Explosive Ordnance Disposal member, confirms the areas searched with pararescuemen SSGT John Horton (center) and SSGT Jimmy Petrolia (right). These and other members of the A-10 recovery team are attempting to locate any remnants of the A-10 and the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs

MSGT Eric Wass, Explosive Ordnance Disposal member, takes a well deserved break during the ground search of the lakes around Gold Dust Peak for remnants of the A-10 and the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs

Explosive Ordnance Disposal members SRA Kelly Roy (left) and SRA Ferdinand Smith (right) search the ponds with their MK-26 Ferrous Ordnance Locators for any remnants of the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs that were carried by the A-10 that crashed on Gold Dust Peak

Electrician Technician First Class Ray Cole (left) and LCDR Jeff Danshaw (right), members of the Naval Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit 7 members from San Diego, California, look at the results of the search effort for the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs carried by the A-10 that crashed on Gold Dust Peak

Engineman CHIEF Jeffry Carruth (left) and Boatswain Mate Second Class Melvis Selerino (right), both from Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit 7 from San Diego, California, prepare their Zodiac boat for the initial search operations for remnants of the four 500 pound bombs carried by the A-10 that crashed near Gold Dust Peak

A pararescueman confirms the areas searched in Negro Basin along EAst Brush Creek in attempt to locate any remnants of the A-10 and the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs

SRA James Ruth (right), an Explosive Ordnance Disposal specialist, uses a metal detector to search for bombs and other ammunition that the A-10 carried before crashing into the slopes near Eagle. TSGT Jeff Thomas (left) follows behind. Other recovery team members can be seen near the debris field

MSGT Eric Wass (left), an Explosive Ordnance Disposal member, gets a location fix with his portable global positioning system as SRA Scott McCullough (background) surveys the area in an attempt to locate any remnants of the A-10 and the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs

description

Summary

The original finding aid described this photograph as:

Base: Gold Dust Peak

State: Colorado (CO)

Country: United States Of America (USA)

Scene Camera Operator: SSGT David W. Richards

Release Status: Released to Public

Combined Military Service Digital Photographic Files

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Tags

msgt eric wass msgt eric wass explosive ordnance disposal member explosive ordnance disposal member system sra scott mccullough sra scott mccullough background surveys attempt remnants pound mark pound mark bombs gold dust peak crash site colorado global positioning system gps staff sergeant mark 82 bombs high resolution gold dust peak ssgt david us national archives
date_range

Date

22/08/1997
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Source

The U.S. National Archives
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Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
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No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Wass, Pound Mark, Global Positioning System

STAFF Sergeant (SSGT) Vincent Scott and AIRMAN First Class (A1C) Vamal Taylor, weapons loaders from the 522nd Fighter Squadron (FS), Cannon Air Force Base (AFB), New Mexico, load a Mark 82, 500-pound bomb onto an F-16 Falcon fighter at Eielson AFB, Alaska, in support of exercise Northern Edge 2002

Hurricane/Tropical Storm - Vestal, N. Y. , September 14, 2011 -- Debris are left on the curve by residents as they clean their home after remnants of Tropical Storm Lee passed through New York State on September 7, 2011. FEMA plays a vital role supporting State, Tribal and local governments as they respond to the impacts of remnants of Tropical Storm Lee. Photo by Elissa Jun/FEMA

Rags. Collection and processing. A portion of the sorting room in a large Eastern rag processing plant. In this room new rag remnants, consisting chiefly of cuttings received from clothing factories, are sorted. The rags are classified and separated according to the type of cloth; colored rags are graded according to the ease with which they can be bleached. The baskets in back of the women are filled with rags that have been sorted and classified. The women work in teams of two; it takes a team about two hours to sort the rags in one full bale. In another part of the plant, a room of the same size and general appearance as this is used for sorting used rags. Shapiro Company, Baltimore, Maryland

Location: Caribbean Sea. Crew members prepare to transfer Mark 82 500-pound bombs by highline from the ammunition ship USS MOUNT BAKER (AE 34) to the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER (CVN 69)

Explosive Ordnance Disposal members conduct a subsurface search with their Schontadt Magnetic influence Detectors on the upper debris field of the A-10 crash site

Members of the A-10 recovery team take a short break during their search for the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs that were carried by the A-10 that crashed on Gold Dust Peak

An aviation ordnance crew loads a Mark 82 500-pound bomb onto an ordnance skid aboard the aircraft carrier USS KITTY HAWK (CV-63)

Members of the A-10 recovery team confirm the areas searched along East Brush Creek in their attempts to locate any remnants of the A-10 that crashed on Gold Dust Creek and the four 500 pound Mark 82 bombs

A Mark 82 500-lb. bomb, dropped by a 926th Tactical Fighter Group A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft, explodes on Vieques Range during exercise Patriot Pearl

Members of the Naval Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit 7 members from San Diego, California set out on the Zodiac boat to begin their initial search for the four missing 500 pound Mark 82 bombs carried by the A-10 that crashed near Gold Dust Peak. New York Lake is the first of six lakes in the Gold Dust Peak that will be searched

A member of Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Team 3 demonstrates disarming procedures for a Mark 82 500-pound practice bomb to a group of Kuwaiti navy EOD personnel during Eager Express '92

STAFF Sergeant (SSGT) Roy Miller (right), AIRMAN First Class (A1C) Jacob Stocks and AIRMAN (AMN) Justin Brock, with the 366th Explosive Munitions Squadron (EMS), Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho, carefully move 500-pound Mark 82 bombs into position

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msgt eric wass msgt eric wass explosive ordnance disposal member explosive ordnance disposal member system sra scott mccullough sra scott mccullough background surveys attempt remnants pound mark pound mark bombs gold dust peak crash site colorado global positioning system gps staff sergeant mark 82 bombs high resolution gold dust peak ssgt david us national archives