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Google Goes Inside the Boneyard
Satellite photographs in Google Earth document the Boneyard, a 2,600-acre airplane graveyard in Arizona.
- The Davis-Monthan Air Force Base's Web site explains the facility's history: Immediately after World War II, the Army's San Antonio Air Technical Service Command established a storage facility for B-29 and C-47 aircraft at Davis-Monthan AFB. Today, this facility is the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (309 AMARG), which has grown to include more than 4,400 aircraft and 13 aerospace vehicles.read moreGoogleShare
- This one-of-a-kind facility within the Air Force Materiel Command structure provides critical aerospace maintenance and regeneration capabilities for Joint and Allied/Coalition warfighters in support of global operations and agile combat support for a wide range of military operations.read moreGoogleShare
- Davis-Monthan was chosen for this storage center due to Tucson's meager rainfall, low humidity, and alkaline soil. These conditions make it possible to store aircraft indefinitely with a minimum of deterioration and corrosion. In addition, the soil is hard, making it possible to park aircraft in the desert without constructing concrete or steel parking ramps.read moreGoogleShare
- The facility's mission has evolved beyond merely the storage and preservation of aircraft. Today the Group provides customer services including aircraft regeneration (restoring aircraft to flying status), programmed depot-level maintenance, and parts reclamation, in addition to its historic storage and disposal functions.read moreGoogleShare
- Published8 Images
Google Goes Inside the Boneyard
Satellite photographs in Google Earth document the Boneyard, a 2,600-acre airplane graveyard in Arizona.
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- Google Goes Inside the Boneyard
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