THE HERALD   EVERETT, WASHINGTON
HeraldNet on Facebook HeraldNet on Twitter HeraldNet RSS feeds HeraldNet Pinterest HeraldNet Google Plus HeraldNet Youtube
  Newsletters: Sign up | Manage subscriptions
Published: Saturday, January 5, 2013, 12:01 a.m.

Expedition to seek buried WWII Spitfires

Sign up for HeraldNet Headlines
LONDON -- An airplane-obsessed farmer, a freelance archaeologist, and a team of excavators are heading from Britain to the Myanmar city of Yangon on Saturday to find a nearly forgotten stash of British fighter planes thought to be carefully buried beneath the former capital's airfield.

The venture, backed with a million-dollar guarantee from a Belarusian videogame company, could uncover dozens of Spitfire aircraft locked underground by American engineers at the end of World War II.

"We could easily double the number of Spitfires that are still known to exist," said 63-year-old David Cundall, the farmer and private pilot who has spent nearly two decades pursuing the theory that 36 of the famous fighter planes were buried, still in excellent condition, in wooden crates in a riverbed at the end of an airport runway.

"In the Spitfire world it will be similar to finding Tutankhamen's tomb," he told reporters at a media conference held in a London airport hotel Friday.

Not everyone is as convinced. Even at the conference, freelance archaeologist Andy Brockman acknowledged that it was "entirely possible" that all the team would find was a mass of corroded metal -- if it found anything at all.

But Cundall said eyewitness testimony -- from British and American veterans as well as elderly local residents of Myanmar -- coupled with survey data, aerial pictures, and ground radar soundings left him in no doubt that the planes were down there.
Comments


HeraldNet highlights

Day 3 in Paris
Day 3 in Paris: Aircraft on display at world's biggest air show (27 new photos)
Scenes from graduation
Scenes from graduation: Lynnwood High School celebrates the Class of 2013 (gallery)
Mount Persis scramble
Mount Persis scramble: Eye popping views and a calf-aching climb (gallery)
Top of their class
Top of their class: The athletes, team and school of the year in high school sports