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Updated at 10:46 a.m. ET


BIRMINGHAM, Ala. A UPS cargo plane crashed Wednesday morning in an open field just outside an airport in Birmingham, Ala., killing two people.


April Odom, a spokeswoman for Birmingham Mayor William Bell, confirmed to CBS News that two bodies were found in the wreckage.


Earlier, UPS spokesman Jeff Wafford said there were two crew members aboard the plane, and Bell said the two crewmembers on board were the pilot and the co-pilot.



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UPS jet crash: Pilot and co-pilot confirmed dead



Witnesses said there were as many as five explosions in the hour since the Airbus A300 plane crashed around 5 a.m. CDT on approach to Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport.


Odom told CBS News no distress calls were made from the flight to the airport's air-traffic-control tower.


Reporter Rick Jackson of CBS Birmingham affiliate WIAT-TV reported on "CBS This Morning" on the phone from near the crash site that the plane split in half from the impact.


A residential area is about two blocks away from where Jackson was reporting. A resident walking his dog told Jackson that he was "blessed" that the plane didn't crash in the neighborhood.


There were no homes in the immediate area of the crash, said Toni Herrera-Bast, a spokeswoman for Birmingham's airport authority.


The Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that the plane was en route from Louisville, Ky.


In a statement, Airbus said the twin-engine aircraft was built in 2003 and had accumulated approximately 11,000 flight hours over about 6,800 flights.


Herrera-Bast said the plane crashed in "open land" she described as a grassy field on the outskirts of the airport. The crash hasn't affected airport operations, she said.


A UPS cargo plane lies on a hill at Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport after crashing on approach Aug. 14, 2013, in Birmingham, Ala.

A UPS cargo plane lies on a hill at Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport after crashing on approach Aug. 14, 2013, in Birmingham, Ala.


/ AP Photo/Hal Yeager

FAA spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said the scene is about a half-mile north of Runway 18.


Sharon Wilson, who lives near the airport, said she was in bed before dawn when an airplane went over her house at what sounded like treetop level.


The engines were making an odd sound like sputtering, she said.


"It sounded like an airplane had given out of fuel. We thought it was trying to make it to the airport. But a few minutes later we heard a loud 'boom,'" she said.


Another resident, Jerome Sanders, lives directly across from the runway. He said he heard a plane just before dawn and could see flames seconds before it crashed.


"It was on fire before it hit," Sanders said.


At 7 a.m. Wednesday, conditions in the area were rainy with low clouds. Smoke was still rising from the scene at 7:47 a.m. There was a piece of the plane's white fuselage near a blackened area on the ground.


"The plane is in several sections," said Bell, who was briefed on the situation by the city's fire chief. "There were two to three small explosions, but we think that was related to the aviation fuel."


The plane appears to have struck a massive hardwood tree north of the runway. The top was broken out of the tree and there are pieces of a utility pole and limbs in the road. Nearby, grass was blackened near the bottom of a hill. A piece of the fuselage and an engine are visible on the crest of the hill. White smoke was pouring from the other side of the hill.


"As we work through this difficult situation, we ask for your patience, and that you keep those involved in your thoughts and prayers," Atlanta-based UPS said in a statement.


Previously, a UPS cargo plane crashed on Sept. 3, 2010, in the United Arab Emirates, just outside Dubai. Both pilots were killed. Authorities there blamed the crash on its load of between 80,000 to 90,000 lithium batteries, which are sensitive to temperature. Investigators found that a fire on board likely began in the cargo containing the batteries.



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