Crews hoist second Boeing 737 fuselage from derailment site

July 8, 2014: A work crew pulls a Boeing 737 fuselage up a bank of the Clark Fork River near Alberton, Mont., as efforts to retrieve three fuselages that tumbled down the embankment following a derailment last week continued. The fuselage was the second of three in or near the river to be recovered. (AP/The Missoulian)

Crews have removed the second of three commercial airplane bodies from a river embankment in western Montana after they tumbled off a train in a derailment.

Montana Rail Link spokeswoman Lynda Frost says the second newly manufactured Boeing 737 fuselage was winched up Monday without any problems.

She says the third is expected to be removed from the Clark Fork River embankment near Alberton by the end of Tuesday.

Nineteen train cars derailed Thursday, spilling three fuselages into the river and three more near the tracks. Frost says the fuselages and their flatbed cars weigh a combined 70 tons each.

The fuselages and other airplane parts were being transported from a manufacturing plant in Wichita, Kansas, to Boeing facilities in Washington state.

Railway officials are investigating the cause of the derailment.