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There is a girl who survived alone on a plane that crashed 3,000 meters from the sky. Her name is Julian Koebke, and the story begins at Lima Airport in Peru on Dec. 24, 1971. Julian Koebke, a 17-year-old girl, boarded a small domestic flight with his mother. The destination was Pucalpa, a city in northern Peru, where Julian's father was waiting. The flight was LANSA 508. The day she boarded, the plane was accompanied by 92 passengers and crew. Julian's parents are both zoologists from Germany Julian has been living with his parents in the Amazon rainforest since childhood, learning the jungle as part of his life. She grew up with advice from a young age: how to drink water from trees, avoid poisonous insects, and follow the water when you're lost. But the reality she was going to face that day was more extreme than any survival class. Not long after takeoff, the plane enters the thunderstorm zone. The airline was warned of bad weather, but it went ahead with its scheduled course. Eventually, strong lightning strikes the aircraft and the plane disintegrates in the air at an altitude of 6,400 meters. Julian was wearing a seat belt and the seat block fell with the front and rear chairs connected together. It fell over the jungle from about 3,000 meters above. She fell unconscious to the ground Surprisingly, dense bushes and branches were able to survive by absorbing the drop shock.




Julian suffered a broken collarbone, an eye injury, and a scratch Left alone in the middle of the jungle. There was no one around, and it was hard to find the remains of the gas. But fortunately, she found some candy scattered on the plane It was the only food she put in her mouth for 11 days. She came up with the survival knowledge she knew. It reminded me of my father's words that walking along the waterways would eventually reach where people live. Julian walked barefoot along the running water. During the day, I had to endure the humidity and swarms of insects under the scorching sun At night, I slept in the sounds of snakes, insects, and wild animals. But I couldn't sleep because of a bug called a human skin fly. Even the larvae of the human skin fly throughout my body were parasitic and bothered her. Julian, who had only candy to eat, became increasingly weak due to lack of sleep and parasites. And then on the ninth day, we find a motorboat anchored by the water. Julianne, who once saw her father pour gasoline on her body to treat a dog infested with fly larvae, poured the oil into her arm. At that time, only one arm produced thirty-five larvae. And Julianne waited tirelessly for someone to help on the spot. After a long wait, they were found by loggers who came back from work and their wounds were healed.

The next day, Julian canoeed along the river for about seven hours and was flown back to the hospital to meet his father. Of the 92 people on board, only one came back alive, It was the moment Julian Koebke, the only survivor of the plane crash, was confirmed. Julian went back to Germany and majored in biology After receiving his doctorate, he returned to Peru and became a scientist studying bats and Amazon ecosystems. She continued her life again as a child in the land where she survived. Her story was documented and in it, Julian went back to where the accident happened and once again faced the air and calm of the rainforest. Julian summarized the meaning of survival in his autobiography. "I just wanted to survive. What was greater than fear, was the will to end this situation."


