Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz.—In a sprawling, sun-scorched expanse of Arizona, a chilling sight stretches across 2,600 ...
The aviation museum in Tucson has new planes, some of which you can go in. Here's how long it takes to go through the museum and how to get tickets.
Every military aircraft eventually completes its service. This is not always due to being shot down or damaged—over time, they become redundant. Where do these enormous machines end up after finishing ...
What are 3,200 military aircraft doing in the Arizona desert?
The vast majority of vehicles live out their final days in scrapyards to await recycling or simply rust away. They're eerie, ...
The Boneyard Project For Round Trip: Art from The Bone Yard Project, the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona, invited street artists to create works on scrapped military airplanes. The ...
Ever wonder where military planes go to retire? The world’s largest boneyard, AMARG in Arizona, holds thousands of aircraft across 2,600 acres—some scrapped, others preserved for future use.
sending them to storage in Arizona's famous Davis-Monthan Air Force Base boneyard. But even with all of the Air Force's KC-10s retired, that is still not the complete end. As of January 2025, two ...
We’re about to embark on a time-traveling adventure through Arizona’s most captivating Wild West towns ... And if you’re feeling brave, take a tour of Boot Hill Graveyard. It’s the final resting place ...
Tucson has a busy mix of civilian and military aircraft, with an Air Force Base, and a civilian airport that shares runways ...
The crash at the Marana Regional Airport, about 21 miles northwest of Tucson, is the second fatal aviation mishap this month ...
a French military plane. “We never got any information that we would be receiving this aircraft,” Puvirnituq Mayor Lucy Qalingo said.