Eastern Air Lines Flight 980
N819EA, the aircraft involved in the accident, in October 1982  | |
| Accident | |
|---|---|
| Date | 1 January 1985 | 
| Summary | Controlled flight into terrain for unknown reasons | 
| Site | Mount Illimani, Bolivia  16°38′10″S 67°47′21″W / 16.63611°S 67.78917°W  | 
| Aircraft | |
| Aircraft type | Boeing 727-225 Advanced | 
| Operator | Eastern Air Lines | 
| IATA flight No. | EA980 | 
| ICAO flight No. | EAL980 | 
| Call sign | EASTERN 980 | 
| Registration | N819EA | 
| Flight origin | President Stroessner International Airport, Asunción, Paraguay | 
| 1st stopover | El Alto International Airport, La Paz, Bolivia | 
| Last stopover | Simón Bolívar International Airport, Guayaquil, Ecuador | 
| Destination | Miami International Airport, Florida, United States | 
| Occupants | 29 | 
| Passengers | 19 | 
| Crew | 10 | 
| Fatalities | 29 | 
| Survivors | 0 | 
Eastern Air Lines Flight 980 was a scheduled international flight from Asunción, Paraguay, to Miami, Florida, United States. On January 1, 1985, while descending towards La Paz, Bolivia, for a scheduled stopover, the Boeing 727 jetliner struck Mount Illimani at an altitude of 19,600 feet (6,000 m), killing all 29 people on board.
The wreckage was scattered over a large area of a glacier covered with snow. Over the decades, several search expeditions were only able to recover a small amount of debris, and searches for the flight recorders were unsuccessful. The accident remains the highest-altitude controlled flight into terrain in commercial aviation history.