Lost Over Laos
Scientists and soldiers combine forensics and archaeology to search for pilot Bat Masterson, one of 88,000 Americans missing in action from recent wars.
- By Robert M. Poole
- Photographs by Paul Hu and Christophe Paul
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2006, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 9)
But the crash site—prosaically logged in military records as Case No. 1303—was almost certainly Masterson's: it fit the coordinates noted by his comrades in 1968, and the aircraft debris made it clear that the downed plane was a Skyraider, the only one of its kind lost in this part of Laos. Although the place had been thoroughly scavenged prior to our arrival by villagers looking for scrap metal and other useful bits of hardware, members of the recovery team were optimistic that a month's excavation might finally solve the mystery of Masterson's fate.
"We're just now getting into a very productive part of the dig," said Elizabeth "Zib" Martinson Goodman, the civilian anthropologist in charge of recovery operations. Goodman, an ebullient 36-year-old raised on an apple orchard in central Washington State, showed me around the site, where a swath of jungle had been peeled back, revealing a grid of four meter squares climbing down the mountainside and ending where a dense green wave of vegetation reared up at the edge.
Near the top of the cleared area was the impact crater, a black hole in the red earth. "On most archaeology sites," said Goodman, "you dig down through the topsoil, sifting for artifacts until you reach the sterile layer, the undisturbed layer of soil below the surface." On this hillside, the stratigraphy was confused. The plane punched through the sterile profile. Scavengers later excavated around the plane, tossing the dirt containing wreckage and human remains down the hill. Monsoons subsequently scattered the evidence. Any remaining artifacts would be dispersed downhill from the crater.
That is where a marine and a soldier, stripped to their T-shirts and sweating, chopped away with pickaxes at the lower edge of the clearing. Each shovel of dirt was dumped into a black plastic bucket labeled for this particular grid and conveyed up the hillside by a brigade of some 50 Hmong workers. On the brow of the hill, a score of Hmong villagers, working with Americans from the JPAC team, strained each bucket of soil through quarter-inch screens to recover the tiniest clues from the site—twisted bits of olive drab metal, mud-streaked screws and rivets, strands of insulated wire, melted gobs of plastic and the occasional stinging centipede lurking in the dirt. One afternoon, as I was sifting earth at the screening station, I uncovered a scorpion in my tray. A Buddhist co-worker walked over, calmly lifted the irate arachnid out with a trowel, set it free at the jungle's edge and blithely returned to work.
The excavation looked like textbook archaeology, laid out with pegs and strings in geometrical precision, but in other ways it was unique. "Most archaeology gets done in places where people want to live," said Goodman, "like flat places where you can walk around." As she spoke, we were listing like sailors on a heeling sailboat, straining to keep balanced on the nearly 45-degree slope. "We often wind up in places like this, where it's pretty remote and hard to maneuver, or in Papua New Guinea, where we work knee-deep in cold water and mud the whole time," she said. "Half the challenge is just getting there and being able to work." In July 2005, the previous season at Site 1303, frequent rains shut down excavations for days, and on those occasions when work was possible, the footing was treacherous. "The challenge was to get up the hill without breaking your leg," said Goodman, who had supervised the previous excavation.
Our conversation was interrupted by the crackling of a two-way radio on Goodman's hip. A disembodied voice came from the speaker: "We've got something for you."
Another radio voice answered: "Roger. I'm on it." The second voice belonged to Staff Sgt. Steve Mannon, 32, a burly marine in wraparound shades and a dark green polo shirt, who was already scrambling downhill, where workers with picks and shovels had backed away from the hole. They made room for Mannon, the team's unexploded ordnance (UXO) expert, who got calls like this throughout the day. He had come to examine a rusty-looking cylinder, about the size of an egg roll, which the diggers had turned up. Mannon pulled off his sunglasses, squatted in the pit and opened a knife, using the blade to pick the mystery object out of the dirt. "Another 20-millimeter round," he pronounced, easing the ordnance into a satchel, clapping his shades back on and trudging uphill to a jungle path at some distance from the work area. We stopped under a red and white sign emblazoned with skull and crossbones and a warning in English and Lao: "DANGER!!" it read, "UXO!" Just beneath it was a pit in which Mannon had collected another 50 such rounds, part of the Skyraider's 2,000-pound payload. He added the morning's find to the growing pile, which would double in size in the course of our weeks here.
"What would happen if you set off one of these rounds?" I asked him.
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Comments (3)
Someday I hope to join in the Air Force after High School and hopefully fly jets. Maybe if this happens to me I hope that they will find my bones and bring them home for my whole family to see the remains of me just one last time.
Posted by Patrick F. Games II on September 19,2012 | 11:06 PM
I and my family would like to say Thank you very much to the American Hero and your family whom were try to fight and protect the freedom of Lao people. I have very deep feeling and respectful of remembering Lt.Col Bat and the Family of Masterson forever. May the Lord bless your spirit and your family. If you want to contact me . Let click on the LAO MISSION INTERNATIONAL WEBSITE: www.laomission.org
Kevin Kong Smith
Posted by kevin Kong Smith on January 2,2011 | 09:40 AM
I had the pleasure to know Lt. Col "Bat"Masterson. I was stationed at Eglin A.F.B. 1963-1967. He was one of the finest officers I ever came in contact with. He was a natural born leader, with the ability to bring out the best in a person. To make you believe in yourself and that you could do anything that you wanted to if you would just give it a try. I always saw him as an upbeat andpositive individual. He was always friendly to everyone that he met. I never met anyone that had nothing but good positive things about him.
This country had a great officer in "Bat" Mastertson. I found out about his M.I.A. status in 1986 and felt that I had lost a friend. He has crossed the minds of myself and many of the people that had the pleasure to know him at Eglin many times over the years.
Respectfuly
Ted R. Powell
U.S.A.F. 1963-67
Posted by Ted Powell on April 18,2010 | 07:58 PM
Dont none of these articles realy intrest me. But i cant really relate to the storey, because it didnt stand out. I really respect the men and women who are in vietnam. Because of the simple fact that I wouldnt go out there and fight for my country. So I espect them to the fullest. But thats really all i have to say about the article.
Posted by Grant Johnson on April 6,2008 | 12:51 AM