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UPDATED: 09:46, November 25, 2004 |
| Black boxes of the crashed plane found |
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 The picture taken on Nov. 24, 2004 shows the second flight data recorder, or known as the "black box", of the crashed CRJ-200 jet, which was discovered in the lake in Baotou, north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Nov. 24, 2004. A 50-seat short-haul jet CRJ-200, with 47 passengers and six crew members aboard, left Baotou for east China's Shanghai on Sunday morning, but crashed into a lake of the Nanhai Park shortly after it took off.
 A rescue worker holds the second flight data recorder, or known as the "black box", of the crashed CRJ-200 jet, which was salvaged out of the lake in Baotou, north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Nov. 24, 2004. A 50-seat short-haul jet CRJ-200, with 47 passengers and six crew members aboard, left Baotou for east China's Shanghai on Sunday morning, but crashed into a lake of the Nanhai Park shortly after it took off.
 Two rescue workers check one of the two black boxes of the passenger plane that crashed Sunday in Baotou, Inner Mongolia. 54 people were killed in the accident.
 Black boxes of the passenger plane crashed Sunday in Baotou, Inner Mongolia, were found in the lake November 24, 2004. The black boxes, a pilot cabin voice recorder and flight data recorder, could help determine the cause of the crash that killed 54 people, including one man on the ground.
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