Japan Air Lines Flight 301
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Japan Air Lines Flight 301
Summary
Japan Air Lines Flight 301 is an aviation accident[1]. It draws 31 Wikipedia views per month (aviation_accident category, ranking #362 of 1,410).[2]
Key Facts
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301 is located in Senzu[3].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301 is in the country of occupation of Japan[4].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's image is recorded as Aircraft accident of Mokusei-go.JPG[5].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's instance of is recorded as aviation accident[6].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's operator is recorded as Japan Airlines[7].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's location is recorded as Mount Mihara[8].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's Commons category is recorded as Japan Air Lines Flight 301[9].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's aircraft registration is recorded as N93043[10].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's point in time is recorded as +1952-04-09T00:00:00Z[11].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 34.722222, 'lon': 139.411389}[12].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's number of deaths is recorded as {'amount': '+37'}[13].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's start point is recorded as Tokyo International Airport[14].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's destination point is recorded as Fukuoka Airport[15].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's Aviation Safety Network accident ID is recorded as 19520409-0[16].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's vessel is recorded as Martin 2-0-2[17].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/122blzkv[18].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's victim is recorded as Shirō Ōtsuji[19].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's victim is recorded as Takashi Miki[20].
- Japan Air Lines Flight 301's victim is recorded as Naoji Mori[21].
Why It Matters
Japan Air Lines Flight 301 draws 31 Wikipedia views per month (aviation_accident category, ranking #362 of 1,410).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]