At least 17 people have died in a plane crash in Montana in the United States, according to reports.
Preliminary reports indicated the dead include numerous children, the Federal Aviation Administration said. "We think that it was probably a ski trip for the kids."
A photograph taken by an eyewitness moments after the crash and broadcast on CNN showed a fireball blazing through a grove of trees near a cemetery a short distance from the Bert Mooney Airport in Butte, Montana, where the plane went down.
A reporter from the Montana Standard newspaper cited local emergency officials as saying the plane was carrying a group of young children en route to a ski vacation in Bozeman, Montana, southeast of the crash site and about 50 miles north of Yellowstone National Park.
An FAA spokesman in Seattle, Mike Fergus, put the preliminary death toll from the crash at 17 people. He said there was no indication of any survivors on the plane, nor of casualties on the ground.
He said authorities on the scene had reported to the FAA that a number of children were on the plane.
A Los Angeles-based FAA official said the plane had taken off from the northern California town of Oroville, and crashed on final approach at the airport in Butte.
A spokesman said the small plane, a single engine turboprop Pilatus PC-12, departed from Orville, California, and that the pilot had filed a flight plan showing a final destination of Bozeman.
The plane crashed about 500 feet from the airport while attempting to land and caught on fire. There were no known fatalities on the ground.
An official of the Butte-Silver Bow County Fire Department reached by telephone declined comment, as did an airport spokesman, both of whom referred queries back to the FAA and National Transportation Safety Board.
NTSB officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
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