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What Caused Miami Plane To End Up In Jacksonville River? Weather May Have Been A Factor

MIAMI (CBSMiami/CNN) - Snippets from the conversation between an air traffic controller and the pilot of a plane that slid into the St. Johns River upon landing in Jacksonville Friday night may give insight into why the aircraft landed on a different runway than planned.

The Miami Air International plane was traveling from the Guantanamo Bay military station in Cuba and was supposed to land at Naval Air Station Jacksonville to the west into the wind, as is typical for most aircraft. But the pilots requested to instead land to the east on a different runway, NTSB Vice Chairman Bruce Landsberg said Sunday.

While landing, the plane slid off the runway and into the shallow part of the St. Johns River, Landsberg said Saturday at a news briefing. A barrier on the runway the plane ended up landing on shortened its length from 9,000 feet to 7,800 feet, Landsberg said.

Voice recordings between the pilot and the control tower suggest that there had been concern about bad weather in the area before the landing.

SEE ALSO: Second Plane Crashes Into Jacksonville-Area River, Pilot Rescued By Kayaker

"There appears to be some light to moderate, actually moderate to heavy precipitation on the final for runway two-eight," the controller said in air traffic control audio posted to the streaming site liveatc.net.

The pilot later offers an alternative: "Any chance ... I think it looks a lot better coming from runway one-zero."

The controller tells the pilot "both runways (are) looking pretty bad, or pretty soft and showing moderate to heavy precipitation west of the airport," but later says the "one-zero" runway "might be best."

The pilot confirms and responds: "Let's do it."

On Friday night, there was a "weak tropical disturbance" in the area, CNN meteorologist Derek Van Dam said.

"Flying around or through areas of convection can be dangerous as it can create heavy turbulence in the air and a wet runway leading to the threat of hydroplaning upon landing," he said.

The NTSB will be investigating weather, the ungrooved runway pavement and air traffic control, as well as human aspects -- including the flight and cabin crew -- to determine what led to the accident.

All 143 people aboard the aircraft were rescued. Twenty-one people were taken to a nearby hospital in good condition, authorities said.

(©2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company, contributed to this report.)

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