Two planes collide over Alaksa

TRAPPER CREEK, Alaska

The plane that crashed, a Cessna 180, was destroyed by the impact and subsequent fire, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor told The Associated Press. The second plane, a Cessna single-engine, was able to return to Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport after the collision near Trapper Creek.

Alaska State Troopers spokeswoman Megan Peters said that two or three people had died in the crash, and the state medical examiner's office was en route to the site to determine the exact number of people on board when the plane went down.

"It was engulfed in flames on the ground," Peters said of the destroyed plane. "We're seeing if anybody made it out. There's no apparent survivors."

Earlier this month, another collision between two planes was hailed as remarkably unusual after nine people aboard the Piper Navajo involved and four people in the second aircraft, a Cessna 206 floatplane, survived uninjured.

The planes in the July 10 collision sustained some minor damage but were able to land safely in Anchorage, with FAA spokesman Mike Fergus then describing the incident as "almost unheard of."

The plane that landed safely Saturday was registered to a Kevin Earp of Eagle River, Alaska.

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