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Wayback Machine
35 captures
04 Nov 2010 - 10 Sep 2025
AugSEPOct
26
201020112012
success
fail
COLLECTED BY
Organization:Internet Archive
The Internet Archive discovers and captures web pages through many different web crawls.At any given time several distinct crawls are running, some for months, and some every day or longer.View the web archive through theWayback Machine.

Web wide crawl with initial seedlist and crawler configuration from March 2011. This uses the new HQ software for distributed crawling by Kenji Nagahashi.

What’s in the data set:

Crawl start date: 09 March, 2011
Crawl end date: 23 December, 2011
Number of captures: 2,713,676,341
Number of unique URLs: 2,273,840,159
Number of hosts: 29,032,069

The seed list for this crawl was a list of Alexa’s top 1 million web sites, retrieved close to the crawl start date. We used Heritrix (3.1.1-SNAPSHOT) crawler software and respected robots.txt directives. The scope of the crawl was not limited except for a few manually excluded sites.

However this was a somewhat experimental crawl for us, as we were using newly minted software to feed URLs to the crawlers, and we know there were some operational issues with it. For example, in many cases we may not have crawled all of the embedded and linked objects in a page since the URLs for these resources were added into queues that quickly grew bigger than the intended size of the crawl (and therefore we never got to them). We also included repeated crawls of some Argentinian government sites, so looking at results by country will be somewhat skewed.

We have made many changes to how we do these wide crawls since this particular example, but we wanted to make the data available “warts and all” for people to experiment with. We have also done somefurther analysis of the content.

If you would like access to this set of crawl data, please contact us at info at archive dot org and let us know who you are and what you’re hoping to do with it. We may not be able to say “yes” to all requests, since we’re just figuring out whether this is a good idea, but everyone will be considered.

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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20110926125738/http://1000aircraftphotos.com/Contributions/10054.htm
VERN McGARRIGLE COLLECTION
No. 10054. Douglas DC-4 C-54D (42-72469 c/n 10574) US Army Air Forces
Photographed near Anchorage, Alaska, USA, ca. 1946, from Air Classics Magazine via Matt Kennebec

Douglas DC-4 C-54D
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12/31/2010. Remarks byMatt Kennebec: "This photo was taken for a USAF 46th Troop Transport Squadron calendar in April or May 1946.The plane was just a year old; it would make its way to Berlin July 1948 as one of the first
C-54s used in the Airlift. It was with the Second Strategic Support Squadron out of Biggs AFB Texas when it vanished. This photo appeared in Air Classics Magazine Volume 45 No. 1 and also in Volume 46 No. 4 which refers to my efforts to locate the wreckage.

Air Classics Magazine allowed me to distribute this photo in support of my efforts to locate the wreckage. I am hoping to make my 5th and last attempt to locate the wreckage which I believe lies along the US Canada border."

10/31/2010. The 30th of 580 C-54Ds produced in 1944 and 1945, this aircraft made headlines in early 1950. Operated by the Strategic Air Command, the transport disappeared while flying between Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, USA and Great Falls AFB, Montana, on January 26, 1950.

Aircraft AF2469 had filed an 1,800 mls (2,900 km) and 8.5 hr flight plan that would take it over Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada, following the Alaska Highway to British Columbia near Fort Nelson and then into Alberta just north of Edmonton, flying south over the Rocky Mountains and then down into Montana. Two hours into the flight, at 17:09 while flying near Snag, Yukon Territory, the last radio contact was made. The aircraft and its 8 crew and 36 passengers (34 servicemen and 2 civilians) failed to arrive at Great Falls AFB.
Just before midnight the biggest ever northwest search got under way, covering 354,135 sq.mls (917,205 sq.km), involving 7,000 people and 85 aircraft, from single-engined bush planes to four engine bombers (two C-47s crashed, crews were rescued). As of this day no trace has been found of the aircraft nor its passengers.

Created October 31, 2010

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