[url]latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-fbi-san-jose-flight-stowaway-20140421,0,5355557.story[/url]
Crazy that this guy survived
SD
Authorities called it a “miracle” that the teen survived the 5 1/2-hour flight. The wheel well of the Boeing 767 is not pressurized or heated, meaning the teen possibly endured extremely thin air and temperatures as low 80 degrees below zero when it cruised at 38,000 feet.
“How he survived, I don’t know,” Simon said. The boy was unconscious for most of the flight, Simon added.
“I imagine he must have blacked out at about 10,000 feet,” he said. “The air is pretty thin up there.”
According to the Federal Aviation Administration, the plane’s steady climb to high altitudes may allow a person to drift into unconsciousness as oxygen becomes scarce. And as the heat dissipates from the wheel well, a stowaway can develop hypothermia, a condition that preserves the central nervous system. Both hypoxia and hypothermia may resolve as the plane gradually descends for landing, the FAA said.
Bear_Builder wrote:I'll bet things don't seem so bad at home to him anymore.
rw2 wrote:Bear_Builder wrote:I'll bet things don't seem so bad at home to him anymore.
I dunno man. A third of runaways were sexually abused at home (compared to 1-3% of the general population). Half were beaten. The world can be an ugly place and there isn't exactly a permit process to become a parent.
Maybe this particular case was just a lark, but I'd not be quick to make that bet.

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