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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.
![Inside the Boneyard]()
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![A6 Intruders at the Boneyard]()
![Inside the Boneyard]()
![Inside the Boneyard]()
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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