Branson hopes Google Earth helps find Fossett

Wed Sep 5, 2007 3:25pm EDT
 
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By William Albright

RENO, Nevada (Reuters) - The search for missing adventurer Steve Fossett resumed on Wednesday as his friend, British billionaire Richard Branson, tried to find him through a satellite mapping service offered by Google.

Branson told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. he was worried that Fossett, who disappeared over the Nevada desert after taking off in a small plane late on Monday, had not activated the aircraft's emergency tracking beacon.

"I'm talking with friends at Google about seeing whether we can look at satellite images over the last four days to see whether they can see which direction he might have been flying and whether they can see any disturbances anywhere that they can pin from space," he said from Barcelona, Spain.

The company's Google Earth product offers a mapping service using satellite imagery.

The state wing of the Civil Air Patrol resumed its search on Wednesday, focusing on a 600-square mile (1,554-sq-km) area south of the airstrip used by Fossett about 80 miles (128 km) southeast of Reno, Nevada.

Three helicopters and six airplanes are involved in the mission. One of the airplanes is a Utah Civil Air Patrol aircraft with imaging technology that quickly distinguishes man-made objects, including aircraft wreckage, from natural objects.

On Tuesday 13 aircraft looked in vain for signs of Fossett's plane in the Nevada desert and mountains. Maj. Cynthia Ryan of the Civil Air Patrol said on Wednesday electronic transmissions received on Tuesday and suspected of coming from a downed aircraft were "bogus" signals.

Branson has teamed up with Fossett on several aviation adventures and his Virgin company underwrote the U.S. aviator's successful first solo nonstop flight around the world in 2005.  Continued...

 
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