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Boy survives two-hour flight to Moscow hanging onto plane wing

So they are trying to claim some kid survived clinging to (frozen to?) a plane wing, at -58 degrees farenheit, 500+ miles an hour, for TWO hours?

At cruising altitude of 30,000 feet plus you need additional oxygen to survive. HALO jumpers and 30,000 feet plus skydivers all have to have special breathing apparatus.

Humans can survive for weeks without food; days without water; however, we can only survive for minutes without oxygen. While the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere remains fairly constant up to 70,000 feet, the available amount of oxygen to sustain mental and physical alertness decreases above 10,000 feet. The atmosphere is primarily nitrogen (78%) with oxygen comprising 20.9 percent of the atmosphere.

The atmosphere is generally considered to exist up to 100,000 feet (above this altitude the atmosphere is virtually a vacuum until reaching outer space). One-half of the atmosphere is contained from 18,000 feet to the earth's surface (the other 50 percent is from 18,000 feet to 100,000 feet). At sea level, the pressure of the atmosphere is 14.7 pounds per square inch (psi). At 18,000 feet the pressure is 7.34 psi. By 34,000 feet, the pressure is reduced to one-half the value at the 18,000 foot level (3.62 psi). It is this reduction in pressure (or in other words, the less dense air) that causes hypoxia.

Hypoxia is the effects of an insufficient supply of oxygen to the body. Every person can have different symptoms when suffering from hypoxia (U.S. Air Force aircrews are required to take an altitude chamber ride every three years to reinforce and identify their hypoxic symptoms). Some of the common symptoms are: lightheaded sensation, dizziness, reduced vision, and euphoria.

The early signs of hypoxia generally begin at 10,000 feet. U.S. Air Force aircrews must use supplemental oxygen when the cabin pressure of the aircraft reaches this altitude. (NOTE: The cabin altitude of an airliner and other transport aircraft by design will climb no higher than 8,000 feet.) Without supplemental oxygen, your blood has about 90% of its normal oxygen level at 10,000 feet.


I'm calling bullshit on this story.
 
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OCBuckWife;940416; said:
So they are trying to claim some kid survived clinging to (frozen to?) a plane wing, at -58 degrees farenheit, 500+ miles an hour, for TWO hours?

At cruising altitude of 30,000 feet plus you need additional oxygen to survive. HALO jumpers and 30,000 feet plus skydivers all have to have special breathing apparatus.




I'm calling bullshit on this story.
But what if a Pink Unicorn helped him?
 
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Dude... its a Gremlin that's morphed into a little kid to escape... Don't think that shit on Twilight Zone the Movie ain't for reals....
 
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Zurp;940400; said:
I'll wait until Mythbusters (or someone else) can show me that this is plausible before I believe it. Until then, I don't.

You shouldn't need Mythbusters or Snopes.com or anyone else to convince you that the article is bullshit. It's physcially impossible for someone to survive holding onto a wing at 30,000+ feet...hell, it would impossible to even hold onto the wing with wind forces being 500+ mph...
 
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I saw this on Digg earlier today. Even IF he survived the the freezing cold temperatures (for hours nonetheless) AND the 500 MPH wind, there's isn't enough air at 30,000+ feet to survive for very long. He would have blacked out in 30 seconds and be dead in minutes.
 
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Muck;940722; said:
It's a Russian tabloid folks....of course it's bullshit.

There's a damn link to someone who found a road-kill chupacabra in Texas...

There's a current MSNBC story on the Chupacabra:

Monster or dog? ?Goatsucker? tale debated
070831_chupacabra_vmed_7p.widec.jpg
Eric Gay / AP

Phylis Canion holds the head of what she is calling a chupacabra at her home in Cuero, Texas, on Friday. She found the animal dead outside her ranch and thinks it is responsible for killing many of her chickens

Hunter wants DNA test for remains that may explain chupacabra legend

CUERO, Texas - Phylis Canion lived in Africa for four years. She?s been a hunter all her life and has the mounted heads of a zebra and other exotic animals in her house to prove it.
But the roadkill she found last month outside her ranch was a new one even for her, worth putting in a freezer hidden from curious onlookers: Canion believes she may have the head of the mythical, bloodsucking chupacabra.

Entire article: Monster or dog? ‘Goatsucker’ tale debated - Science - MSNBC.com
 
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R0CK3TM4NN;940563; said:
I saw this on Digg earlier today. Even IF he survived the the freezing cold temperatures (for hours nonetheless) AND the 500 MPH wind, there's isn't enough air at 30,000+ feet to survive for very long. He would have blacked out in 30 seconds and be dead in minutes.

Exactly, skydivers that go up that high require oxygen because they can't breathe, so yeah, this story is complete and utter BS. However, it is something to post to the mythbuster forums.
 
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