Smoke billows from the site
where an aircraft crashed near Nanticoke, Md., on Monday, June 11,
2012. The Navy says the unmanned aircraft on a routine maintenance
flight crashed on Maryland's Eastern Shore and there are no injuries.
(AP Photo/The Daily Times, Keith Goldsborough) NO SALES
A military helicopter
circles the area where an aircraft crashed near Nanticoke, Md., on
Monday, June 11, 2012. The Navy says the unmanned aircraft on a routine
maintenance flight crashed on Maryland's Eastern Shore and there are no
injuries. (AP Photo/The Daily Times, Steve Dickerson) NO SALES
In this undated handout
photo provided by Northrop Grumman via the U.S. Navy, an RQ-4 Global
Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle conducts tests over Naval Air Station
Patuxent River, Md. On Monday, June 11, 2012 an RQ-4A aircraft on a
routine training flight crashed near Bloodsworth Island, across the
Chesapeake Bay from the Naval Air Station, but no injuries or property
damage was reported. (AP Photo/Northrop Grumman via U.S. Navy, Erik
Hildebrandt)
NANTICOKE, Md. (AP) — A Naval drone aircraft
crashed on Maryland's Eastern Shore on Monday without injuries or
property damage on the ground, officials said.
The 44-foot plane
on a routine training flight crashed around noon near Bloodsworth
Island, across the Chesapeake Bay from the Patuxent River Naval Air
Station, according to Jaime Cosgrove, a spokeswoman for the Unmanned
Aviation and Strike Weapons program.
Aerial video from WBOC-TV showed a plane-shaped indentation surrounded by burning debris at the swampy crash site.
The cause is being investigated and the U.S. Coast Guard has set up a safety zone around the crash site, officials said.
The
Northrop Grumman RQ-4A BAMS-D drones with a range of 10,500 nautical
miles can reach 11 miles above the ground, which is above most weather,
and stay in the air for more than 30 hours with speeds up to 391 mph,
according to the Navy. It is operated by a crew of four on the ground.
The
$46 million aircraft is one of five acquired from the Air Force Global
Hawk program that support more than half of maritime intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance systems. They have flown more than 5,500
hours in support of combat operations since 2008.
The maritime
surveillance aircraft have been used in support of the 5th Fleet, which
covers much of the Middle East, including the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf
and part of the east African coast.
The southern Maryland station
at the mouth of the Patuxent River, 65 miles southeast of Washington, is
home to the Navy's test pilot school, drone operations and principal
research center for aircraft and support systems.
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