My maths was wrong when I upped the speed to 170k per the cockpit communications. I forgot to update the m/sec
use this to get t for 10000, 170k and 200lbs = 26.3 seconds in the air
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Loginconvert 170k to m/sec = 87.5 m/sec
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Loginspeed * time = distance
87.5 m/sec * 26.3 = 2301 meters or 1.43 miles forward distance from drop in a no pull (assume estimation +/-)
Lets try Occams razor.. simplest assumptions
The bump felt was the stairs dropping.
The initial FBI flight path drawn in BLACK is correct
He left the plane over Hayden Island near I5
He travelled forward approximately 1.43 miles (2300 m) to the NorthEast area of Smith Lake (2100 m I5 on Hayden to Smith Lake)
He died on impact in a no pull
He disappears embedded deep into the marshy bottom, winter is high water level but the lake is very shallow
The river tides (affect lake), body decomposition, yearly flooding or work loosens some money years later
It is a 6-7 mile waterway float downstream to TBAR
AND, it seems nobody has looked, he might still be there
This relies on the flightpath.
"Speculation warning" If the black pen FBI flightpath is correct and there was a slight South turn over Hayden, he may have been jarred from the stairs. If he was at the end of the stairs looking for ground markers and the plane turned, he may have lost his grip and got tossed off prior to his intended LZ.
That area of the Lake/marsh is really only accessible by canoe,,,
Cadaver dogs can detect 15 feet underground and a 100 year old body.. (not referring to Jo)
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LoginTom Osterkamp,1,2 Ph.D.
K9 Water Searches: Scent and ScentTransport Considerations
"Consideration of training aids that dogs are known to detect can aid in the identification of potential scent sources from a sub- merged body. Dogs can detect submerged clothing and shoes (7), possibly from VOCs in the items as a result of contact with the skin. Some handlers use human hair that is normally covered with glandular secretions as a training aid. Fingerprints consist of water, soluble compounds, and insoluble compounds modified by hydrolysis and bacterial degradation that include VOCs that have been impli- cated in human scent (14,16). A single fingerprint on a slide immersed in water produced an oil film on the water surface within a few minutes (27) although the transport process remains unknown. Human bones produce VOCs (20) and have been used as training aids that are detectable by water search dogs."
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