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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
World
Dean Murray & Ryan Fahey

Top Gun fighter jet worth £56m recovered from ocean floor after storm flung it into sea

A £56million Top Gun fighter jet that got blown off an aircraft carrier by high winds has been recovered.

The F/A-18E Super Hornet - the same aircraft model as piloted by Tom Cruise in the recent Maverick movie - disappeared overboard the USS Harry S. Truman "due to unexpected heavy weather " on July 8.

The US Navy has successfully extracted the fighter from the Mediterranean Sea, with pictures taken in Sicily showing it being lowered in protective wrapping onto military sealift ship USNS Mendonca.

The aircraft was found at a depth of approximately 9,500 feet by a team including Task Force (CTF) 68 and Naval Sea Systems Command's Supervisor of Salvage and Diving.

Using the multi-purpose construction vessel Everest, the aircraft was recovered using a CURV-21 remotely operated vehicle to attach specialised rigging and lift lines to the aircraft.

The search and recovery operation took less than 24 hours (USN Milit. Sealift Command/SWNS)

A lifting hook was attached to the rigging to raise the aircraft to the surface and hoist it aboard Everest.

The plane was delivered to a nearby military installation following the recovery effort on August 3 and it will now be transported to the United States.

Lt. Cmdr. Miguel Lewis, US Sixth Fleet salvage officer, said: "The rapid response of the combined team, including SUPSALV and Phoenix International personnel, allowed us to conduct safe recovery operations within 27 days of the incident.

The aircraft was found at a depth of approximately 9,500 feet (PO3 Crayton Agnew/US Navy/SWNS)

"Our task tailored team operated safely and efficiently to meet the timeline.

"The search and recovery took less than 24 hours, a true testament to the team's dedication and capability.

CTF 68 Commodore, Capt. Geoffrey Townsend, added: "Inherent to Task Force 68 is our ability to adapt to any mission set - we can rapidly mobilise and deploy scalable command, control, and communications, in order to seamlessly integrate and provide forward command and control when and where needed."

Earlier this month, a huge shipwreck was found at the bottom of the sea just a few miles off the UK coast.

The aircraft plunged into the depths of the Mediterranean Sea (MC2 Crayton Agnew/US Navy/SWNS)

Just off the East Yorkshire coast, below the dark waters, sits a massive steel structure that was once an ocean liner.

Sitting 100 feet beneath the murky waves is a forgotten wreck - that was actually once one of Europe's finest ships, report HullLive.

Dubbed 'Poland's Titanic', the MS Pilsudski sank 30 miles off the Humber coast, and has now become one of the UK's largest, but least known shipwrecks.

Weighing more than 15,000 tonnes and over 500ft long, the majestic vessel unfortunately sank in November 1939 and was one of the biggest shipping losses of the opening months of the Second World War.

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