Aerial Views of Airports

Aerial photographs capturing various landing fields and airports across Alaska, Panama, the Philippines, and Pennsylvania, showcasing landscapes from above.

Panama Canal Zone - Colon & Cristobal, Aerial Photograph.
Panama Canal Zone - Colon & Cristobal, Aerial Photograph.
Aerial image over Sjötorp.A Bach C-45 comes in for a landing on a newly construction airstrip built in Hidden Valley, 5,000 feet up in the mountains of New Guinea.Aerial photo over the stationThe place is also called Sandviken. Aerial photo over Stationstavsjö Railway. Opened in 1901Aircraft,  Burma, India  & INDIA,Transportation   WarArticle - Titanic sinking. Titanic Sinking. Article and diagrammatic illustration 'How the Titanic Gradually Sank Bow First With Her Lights Blazing to the Last'. Titanic was built by Harland & Wolff in Belfast Ireland during 1910 - 1911 and later sank on April 15th, 1912 after striking an iceberg off the coast of New Foundland during her maiden voyage from Southampton, England to New York, USA, with the loss of 1,522 passengers and crew. (Photo by Titanic Images/Universal Images Group)Aerial photo over the stopAerial view of a part of the area affected during the flood disaster of 1953. Note: The description of this photo is not yet complete and will be supplemented on the basis of the data available at a later stage. However, of many photos of the flood disaster 1953, the location is unknown.This illustration dates to the 1920s. Its caption reads: Bridging the Atlantic by Airship and Aeroplane. This chart graphically shows the course of the first airplanes and airships which crossed the Atlantic. The U.S. Navy seaplane NC-4 was first to make the flight, May 16-27, 1919, making a stop at the Azores. The first non-stop flight was made in a British biplane, June 14-15, 1919. The first airship flight was made by the British dirigible R-34, which made a round-trip flight in July 1919. The ZR-3 (now the Los Angeles). built in Germany flew from there to Lakehurst, N.J. in October 1924. In the same year the Atlantic was crossed by the American world-flyers, going by way of Iceland and Greenland.French Morocco port traffic, 1938. August 2, 1942. "Map no. 912."... , Morocco