Please see the most recent updates in the "Where did the .com name go?" thread. Posts number 16 and 17.
Part 121 or not. Caravan + Heavy Icing conditions = Should stay on the ground.... My condolences to those lost and injured.
The purported weather in that article has not been confirmed. The crash occurred on the short leg from St Mary's to Mountain Village which is just a few minutes: they could see the destination and all the weather once off the runway. Freezing fog is not freezing rain. It is floating ice crystals pulled out of the ground by very dry air. It will leave deep hoar frost on anything still, but it cannot produce icing.
Villagers are nearly all related. A friend of mine originally from Mountain Village lost extended family and friends in that crash.
Reading this thread, I was reminded of am Aviation Safety Seminar I went to one year where we were given a talk about Icing Effects and I recall a tape being played of an MU-2 icing Emergency up in Canada. Here are the clips:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wbm8xzLVgQ4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_lAu-HpzqM4
Yes and no. Technically, freezing fog should be small crystals, but often times the way supercooled water and pellets interact upon contact with the airframe can cause ice formations on the plane. This can be especially true in the engine, which can often become the most critical component to experience freezing.
Ken
How is the supercooled water produced? If moisture is sucked out of the ground, this is pulling from old snow and ice: nothing liquid even supercooled. Over water I could see supercooled water. Yes, St. Mary's to Mountain Village is along a river, so that is entirely possible in this case. Since taking an intro weather class, I have found learning about the details interesting especially as application of chemistry and physics.