CBS/AP/ February 11, 2009, 4:17 PM

Aviation Adventurer Steve Fossett Missing

Millionaire adventurer Steve Fossett, who has cheated death time and again in his successful pursuit of aviation records, was missing Tuesday after taking off in a single-engine plane the day before to scout locations for a land-speed record, officials said.

Teams searched a broad swath of rugged terrain in western Nevada near the ranch where he took off, but searchers had little to go on because he apparently didn't file a flight plan, a Federal Aviation Administration spokesman said.

"They are working on some leads, but they don't know where he is right now," FAA spokesman Ian Gregor said.

Fossett, the first person to circle the world solo in a balloon, was seeking places for an upcoming attempt to break the land speed record in a car, said Paul Charles, a spokesman for Sir Richard Branson, the U.K. billionaire who has financed many of Fossett's adventures.

The 63-year-old took off alone at 8:45 a.m. Monday from an airstrip at hotel magnate Barron Hilton's Flying M Ranch, about 70 miles southeast of Reno.

A friend reported him missing when he didn't return, authorities said.

Thirteen aircraft were searching for Fossett in addition to ground crews, said Maj. Cynthia S. Ryan of the Civil Air Patrol. The teams were doing "grid" searches over hundreds of square miles.

"We are committing maximum resources to this effort," she said. "As far as we know now, it is still a rescue mission."

Gusty winds were hampering the search, Ryan said. "If they get too bad we could have to suspend air search operations," she said.

Said Charles: "We understand that Steve Fossett was flying solo and he was carrying four full tanks of gas on board. He was searching for dry and empty lake beds which might be suitable for his plan to break the land speed record."

Ryan described the plane as a Bellanca Citabria Super Decathalon, blue and white with orange stripes and blue sunburst designs on the wings.

The Bellanca Super Decathlon is used primarily for aerobatics and it is built to withstand the stresses and g-forces encountered during tight turns and maneuvers, reports CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes. While Fossett is obviously a fan of experimental aircraft, he is not known to be an aficionado of aerobatics.

FAA records show the registered owner is Flying M Hunting Club Inc. of Yerington, Nev. The agency certified it Aug. 21, 1980.

A telephone message left for a Peggy Fossett in Beaver Creek, Colo., where Steve Fossett lives, was not immediately returned.

In 2002, Fossett became the first person to fly around the world alone in a balloon. In two weeks, his balloon flew 19,428.6 miles around the Southern Hemisphere. The record came after five previous attempts - some of them spectacular and frightening failures.

John Kugler, a longtime friend who taught Fossett ballooning, described Hilton's ranch as a place where aviation enthusiasts gather for weekends of good food and flying.

Kugler said that Fossett is a careful, capable flyer and that his aircraft is a "safe plane," and he held out hope Fossett would be found alive.

"They're going to find him on a mountainside," Kugler said. "He's going to be hungry and want some good food."

Three years later, in March 2005, he became the first person to fly a plane solo around the world without refueling.

He and a co-pilot also claim to have set a world glider altitude record of 50,671 feet during a flight in August 2006 over the Andes Mountains.

Fossett, a Stanford University graduate with a master's degree from Washington University in St. Louis, went to Chicago to work in the securities business and ultimately founded his own firm, Marathon Securities.

Fossett has climbed some of the world's tallest peaks, including the Matterhorn in Switzerland and Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. He also swam the English Channel in 1985, placed 47th in the Iditarod dog sled race in 1992 and participated in the 24 Hours of Le Mans car race in 1996 and broke the round-the-world sailing record by six days in 2004.

In 1995, Fossett became the first person to fly solo across the Pacific Ocean in a balloon, landing in Leader, Saskatchewan, Canada.

Fossett was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in July. He told a crowd gathered at the Dayton Convention Center in Ohio that he would continue flying.

"I'm hoping you didn't give me this award because you think my career is complete, because I'm not done," Fossett said.

Fossett said he planned to go to Argentina in November in an effort to break a glider record.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
22 Comments Add a Comment
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oakishpines says:


'' ... there''s cartoon characters inside the strings that comprise the atoms ... there''s infinite points betweenn two geometric points and energy and matter can neither be created nor destroyed under ordinary circumstances ... i can kick an atom against a tree such that the whole thing comes down without the atoms breaking down into photons and running off into forever ... and i can kick an atom against what was the tree such that the whole thing goes back up ... and i can bring it down and put it up enough times to create the energy i need to birth a string ... so i am the cartoon characters within the strings ... and there is no difference in being above or below or inside or out or in front or in back or more small or more large or more slow or more fast ... and there is both above and below and more slow and more fast ... and i am all of that and none of that and so much more and so much less ... ''

'' ... being infinite is like being an infinite drop in an infinite bucket in an inifinite universe in infinite more numbers of universes and eternitys ... and i am all of that and none of that and so much more and so much less ... ''

'' ... lets dance non-porno get sick tax world songs rallied round the godliest well beds rocketing round the farm trails ... ''

'' ... the kid army would have won had they not kept stopping to spank all the naked adults ... ''
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mrhoppy-2009 says:
Grow up you idiots. A fellow aviator is down and he must be brought home.
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maxketter says:
toolmangler, your name says it all "looser"
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jetranger7 says:
Go YOU TUBE Steve Fossett and theres some new videos on him !!!
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fairandbal says:
I''''m surprised that the Bushies haven''''t accused the lefties of accusing Bush yet. Wait, that''''s done already.
Posted by incog-nito at 06:34 PM : Sep 04, 2007

What do you mean!? According to the Bushies, this is Clinton''s fault.
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jetranger7 says:
OK, OK, Stop Whining all you Bush Supporters, here it goes now : I believe Mr.Bush & Cheney may have had him picked up for reasons to Secret to be revealed on here, its a Top Secret Military plan that Bush has and only they know about it, he''s probably most likely at Hanger18, area 54 in the Nevada desert getting ready to take a Space Flight up to Mars with those Secret Aliens they don''t want us to know about !!! So bequiet about it, and Don''t tell everybody, and for Christ Sakes don''t post anything about it on the Internet !!! Mums the word !!!!!!! Bush is behind it !!!!!!
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barbaraf4 says:
What''s that old sayings? There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but there are no old, bold pilots. This might have been one adventure too many.
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edintex says:
I sure hope they find Mr. Fossett in good shape.

I''m suprised that one of the Bush-o-phobic left wing commentators on here has not blamed President Bush for Mr. Fossetts unfortunate accident yet.
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sal567 says:
If he crashed and died, at least he died doing what he loved best - flying! Way to go!
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toolmangler-2009 says:
Posted by maxketter at 04:51 PM : Sep 04, 2007

With intreped explorers like you, we wouldn''t be off the ground yet. He accomplished something with his life, what have you accomplished except to applaud his death!!!
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